East-to-west dispersal of bird-associated ixodid ticks in the northern Palaearctic: Review of already reported tick species according to longitudinal migratory avian hosts and first evidence on the genetic connectedness of Ixodes apronophorus between Siberia and Europe

IF 1.7 Q3 PARASITOLOGY
Andor Pitó , Denis Fedorov , Vojtěch Brlík , Jenő Kontschán , Gergő Keve , Attila D. Sándor , Nóra Takács , Sándor Hornok
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Abstract

Birds are long-known as important disseminators of ixodid ticks, in which context mostly their latitudinal, south-to-north migration is considered. However, several bird species that occur in the eastern part of the northern Palaearctic are known to migrate westward. In this study, a female tick collected from the sedge warbler, Acrocephalus schoenobaenus, in Lithuania was identified morphologically and analyzed with molecular-phylogenetic methods. In addition, literature data were reviewed on ixodid tick species known to be associated with birds that have recorded east-to-west migratory route in the Palaearctic. The tick collected from A. schoenobaenus was morphologically identified as Ixodes apronophorus. Two mitochondrial genetic markers for this specimen showed 100% identity with a conspecific tick reported previously in Western Siberia, Russia. Based on literature data, as many as 82 bird species from 11 orders were found to have records of ringing in the easternmost part of the northern Palaearctic and recaptures in Europe. Of these bird species, 31 ixodid tick species were reported in the Euro-Siberian region. Nearly all passeriform bird species with east-to-west migration were reported to carry ticks, whereas no reports of tick infestation were documented from the majority of wetland-associated bird species, mostly from the orders Anseriformes and Charadriiformes. The first European sequences of bona fide I. apronophorus revealed genetic connectedness with conspecific ticks reported from Siberia. Since the principal hosts of this tick species are rodents which do not migrate large distances, the most likely explanation for genetic similarity in this direction is dispersal of this tick species via migratory birds. Given the high number of tick species that are known to associate with bird species migrating in westward direction, this appears to be an important means of the gene flow between geographically distant tick populations in the northern Palaearctic.

Abstract Image

古北冰洋北部与鸟类相关的蜱虫从东到西的传播:根据纵向迁徙鸟类宿主回顾已报告的蜱类物种,以及西伯利亚和欧洲之间 Ixodes apronophorus 遗传联系的首个证据
众所周知,鸟类长期以来一直是蜱虫的重要传播者。不过,已知有几种出现在古北界北部东部地区的鸟类会向西迁徙。在这项研究中,对从立陶宛的莎莺 Acrocephalus schoenobaenus 身上采集到的一只雌性蜱进行了形态鉴定,并用分子系统学方法进行了分析。此外,还查阅了有关已知与古北区有东向西迁徙路线记录的鸟类有关的蜱虫物种的文献资料。从 A. schoenobaenus 身上采集到的蜱经形态学鉴定为 Ixodes apronophorus。该标本的两个线粒体遗传标记显示,它与之前在俄罗斯西西伯利亚报告的同种蜱具有 100%的同一性。根据文献数据,发现在古北界最东部地区有环志记录和在欧洲重捕记录的鸟类多达 11 个目 82 种。在这些鸟类物种中,欧洲-西伯利亚地区报告了 31 种蜱虫。几乎所有由东向西迁徙的雀形目鸟类都被报告携带蜱虫,而大多数与湿地相关的鸟类则没有蜱虫感染的报告,这些鸟类主要来自凫形目和鸻形目。欧洲第一个真正的 I. apronophorus 序列显示,它与西伯利亚报告的同种蜱存在遗传联系。由于这种蜱虫的主要宿主是啮齿类动物,而啮齿类动物不会进行远距离迁移,因此这种遗传相似性最有可能的解释是这种蜱虫通过候鸟传播。鉴于已知有大量蜱虫物种与向西迁徙的鸟类物种有关联,这似乎是古北区北部地理位置遥远的蜱虫种群之间基因流动的一个重要途径。
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