动物运动对环境寄生虫丰度的解缠运输和营养效应。

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 PARASITOLOGY
Houssein Samwel Kimaro, Jennifer Mclntyre, Vanessa O Ezenwa, Ricardo M Holdo, Jason Donaldson, J Grant C Hopcraft, Thomas A Morrison
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引用次数: 0

摘要

迁徙的野生动物在疾病传播中起着巨大的作用。通常认为,通过寄生虫运输效应,传播风险与迁徙宿主密度成比例,但在环境传播的寄生虫中,迁徙宿主也可以通过营养效应影响寄生虫的可用性。营养效应可以放大或抑制运输效应,使得迁移宿主对常驻宿主的净影响难以预测。我们认为,净效应是由移民运动的两个属性决定的:使用强度(即移民数量)和使用持续时间(即停留时间)。以胃肠道线虫(ginmatodes)为研究对象,通过控制5种不同处理组合的加粪强度和放牧时间,实验改变了迁徙食草角马(Connochaetes taurinus)的运输和营养效应,并测量了它们对牧场中传染性ginmatodes第三期幼虫密度的影响。研究发现:(1)较高的粪添加量增加了GIN幼虫的密度;(2)模拟放牧降低了GIN的密度,特别是在粪添加量高的处理中;(3)与单次添加粪和放牧处理相比,较长的使用时间和较低的使用强度降低了后续寄主的GIN密度。我们的研究结果表明,迁徙宿主通过运输效应直接促进寄生虫的传播,而感染风险随着营养相互作用的强度和持续时间的增加而下降。我们的研究结果强调了运输和营养相互作用在塑造寄生虫在移民居住系统中的传播中被低估的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disentangling transport and trophic effects of animal movement on environmental parasite abundance.

Migratory wildlife plays an outsized role in disease transmission. Transmission risk is often assumed to be scaled with migratory host density through parasite transport effects, but in environmentally transmitted parasites, migratory hosts can also influence parasite availability via trophic effects. Trophic effects can either amplify or dampen transport effects, making the net impact of migratory hosts on resident hosts difficult to predict. We propose that the net effect is shaped by two attributes of migrant movement: intensity of use (i.e., number of migrants) and duration of use (i.e., length of stay). Using gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) as a model, we experimentally varied transport and trophic effects of a migratory grazer wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) by manipulating the intensity and duration of dung addition and grazing across five treatment combinations in replicated plots, and measuring their effects on the density of infective third-stage GIN larvae in pasture. We found that: (1) higher dung addition increased GIN larvae density, (2) simulated grazing reduced the density of GIN, particularly in treatments with high dung addition, and (3) longer duration and lower intensities of use reduced GIN density for the subsequent hosts compared to treatments with single bouts of dung addition and grazing. Our results indicate that migratory hosts directly facilitate parasite spread via transport effects, while infection risk tends to decline with increasing intensity and duration of trophic interactions. Our results highlight the underappreciated role of transport and trophic interactions in shaping parasite spread in migrant-resident systems.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
2.50%
发文量
76
审稿时长
23 days
期刊介绍: International Journal for Parasitology offers authors the option to sponsor nonsubscriber access to their articles on Elsevier electronic publishing platforms. For more information please view our Sponsored Articles page. The International Journal for Parasitology publishes the results of original research in all aspects of basic and applied parasitology, including all the fields covered by its Specialist Editors, and ranging from parasites and host-parasite relationships of intrinsic biological interest to those of social and economic importance in human and veterinary medicine and agriculture.
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