森林结构对鸟类宿主、双翅目病媒和血孢子虫寄生虫相互作用的影响。

IF 2.2 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences BMC Ecology Pub Date : 2020-08-19 DOI:10.1186/s12898-020-00315-5
Willem van Hoesel, Diego Santiago-Alarcon, Alfonso Marzal, Swen C Renner
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引用次数: 11

摘要

背景:森林栖息地是多种鸟类重要的生物多样性避难所。寄生可以调节寄主物种的存在和丰度,寄生虫的影响可以根据森林管理实践而改变。这种过程在媒介传播的禽血红孢子虫中没有得到很好的研究。我们分析了森林管理对鸟类-双翅目-血红孢子虫相互作用的影响,使用德国东北部管理和未管理的山毛榉林栖息地的7种常见鸟类。我们假设森林结构异质性影响鸟类宿主的寄生虫种群参数(即流行率和寄生虫血症),通过其对鸟类宿主状况的影响,也通过媒介丰度的变化。结果:在不同的山毛榉林类型(即幼林、老林和未管理的山毛榉)和除红毛毛榉(35%)外的所有鸟类中,寄生虫的流行率都很高(约80%),且呈均匀性。不同鸟类的寄生率不同,但不同鸟类的森林类型间寄生率不相同(最低寄生率的鸟类是鲁柏、黄斑杜鹃和绿斑杜鹃)。在我们的研究系统中,我们发现媒介丰度不是寄生虫动态的主要驱动因素。我们发现森林结构直接影响寄生虫感染概率,并通过可用资源潜在地影响宿主状况,这些资源必须用于对抗感染(即高寄生虫血症)或维持良好的身体状况。结论:每种预测因子的影响都是鸟类特有的,我们发现双翅目媒介在我们的宿主-媒介-寄生虫系统中不是最重要的影响因子。森林生境变量的影响表明,对于本研究的大多数鸟类,栖息地对感染概率的调节作用更大(如风疹E. rubecula, Fringilla coelebs, Sylvia atricapilla),而对Parus来说,主要的栖息地特征首先影响个体的身体状况,然后影响感染概率。我们的研究结果强调需要进行物种特异性分析,并使用连续的森林结构参数(例如,间隙比例,朝南朝向)来更好地了解栖息地和土地利用对宿主-媒介-寄生虫动态的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Effects of forest structure on the interaction between avian hosts, dipteran vectors and haemosporidian parasites.

Background: Forest habitats are important biodiversity refuges for a wide variety of bird species. Parasitism may modulate host species presence and abundance, and parasite effects can change according to forest management practices. Such processes are not well studied in vector-borne avian haemosporidians. We analyzed the effects of forest management on bird-dipteran-haemosporidian interactions, using seven common bird species in managed and unmanaged beech forest habitats in northeastern Germany. We assumed that forest structural heterogeneity affects parasite population parameters in avian hosts (i.e., prevalence and parasitemia), through its effect on the condition of the avian host but also through varying vector abundances.

Results: Parasite prevalence was high (about 80%) and homogeneous across different beech forest categories (i.e., young, old, unmanaged) and for all bird species, except Erithacus rubecula (35%). Parasitemia varied across bird species but not across forest categories within each avian species (lowest parasitemia were found in E. rubecula, Turdus merula, and Turdus philomelos). In our study system, we found that vector abundance was not the main driver of parasite dynamics. We found that forest structure affects parasite infection probability directly and potentially host condition via available resources that have to be used either to combat infections (i.e., high parasitemia) or to maintain a good body condition.

Conclusions: The effects of each of the predictors were bird species-specific, and we found that Diptera vectors were not the foremost influence in our host-vector-parasite system. Effects of forest habitat variables indicated that for most bird species in this study, habitat regulation of infection probability was more likely (i.e., E. rubecula, Fringilla coelebs, Sylvia atricapilla), whereas for Parus major habitat characteristics impacted first individuals' body condition and subsequently the probability of infection. Our findings emphasize the need of species-specific analyses and to use continuous forest structural parameters (e.g., the proportion of gap, south facing aspect) to better understand habitat and land use effects on host-vector-parasite dynamics.

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来源期刊
BMC Ecology
BMC Ecology ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.50%
发文量
0
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Ecology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on environmental, behavioral and population ecology as well as biodiversity of plants, animals and microbes.
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