Population density drives increased parasitism via greater exposure and reduced resource availability in wild red deer.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 PARASITOLOGY
Adam Z Hasik, Shane Butt, Katie Maris, Sean Morris, Alison Morris, Richard S Turner, Josephine M Pemberton, Gregory F Albery
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Abstract

Exposure to environmentally transmitted parasites should increase with population density due to accumulation of infective parasites in space. However, resource competition also increases with density, lowering immunity and increasing susceptibility, offering an alternative pathway for density-dependent infection. To test the relationships between these two processes and parasitism, we examined associations between host density, resource availability, immunity, and counts of 3 common helminth parasites using a long-term study of red deer. We found evidence that immunity increased with resource availability while parasite counts declined with immunity. We also found that greater density correlated with reduced resource availability, and while density was positively associated with both strongyle and tissue worm burdens, resource availability was independently and negatively associated with the same burdens. Our results support separate roles of density-dependent exposure and susceptibility in driving infection, providing evidence that resource competition is an important driver of infection, exacerbating effects of density-dependent increases in exposure.

在野生马鹿中,种群密度通过更多的暴露和资源可用性的降低而导致寄生虫的增加。
由于感染性寄生虫在太空中的积累,接触环境传播寄生虫的机会应随着人口密度的增加而增加。然而,资源竞争也随着密度的增加而增加,降低免疫力和增加易感性,为密度依赖性感染提供了另一种途径。为了测试这两个过程与寄生之间的关系,我们通过对马鹿的长期研究,研究了宿主密度、资源可用性、免疫力和3种常见寄生虫数量之间的关系。我们发现证据表明,免疫力随着资源的可用性而增加,而寄生虫数量随着免疫力而下降。我们还发现,更大的密度与资源可用性降低相关,而密度与圆线虫和组织线虫的负担均呈正相关,资源可用性与相同的负担独立且负相关。我们的研究结果支持密度依赖性暴露和易感性在驱动感染中的独立作用,提供了资源竞争是感染的重要驱动因素的证据,加剧了密度依赖性暴露增加的影响。
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来源期刊
Parasitology
Parasitology 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
280
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Parasitology is an important specialist journal covering the latest advances in the subject. It publishes original research and review papers on all aspects of parasitology and host-parasite relationships, including the latest discoveries in parasite biochemistry, molecular biology and genetics, ecology and epidemiology in the context of the biological, medical and veterinary sciences. Included in the subscription price are two special issues which contain reviews of current hot topics, one of which is the proceedings of the annual Symposia of the British Society for Parasitology, while the second, covering areas of significant topical interest, is commissioned by the editors and the editorial board.
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