矿物舔舐是寄生虫传播的潜在媒介

IF 1.8 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
William J. Severud , Todd M. Kautz , Jerrold L. Belant , Seth A. Moore
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引用次数: 0

摘要

离散的景观特征可以在时间和空间上集中动物,导致非随机的种间相遇。这些遭遇对捕食者-猎物的相互作用、栖息地选择、种内竞争以及寄生虫和其他病原体的传播都有影响。寄生线虫细柱线虫的生命周期需要一个陆生腹足纲的中间宿主。细尾鹿的自然宿主是白尾鹿,而一个值得保护的异常宿主是驼鹿,作为寄生虫的天真宿主,驼鹿很容易死亡。当细尾P.tenuis幼虫在鹿的粪便中脱落,然后被吃掉或通过脚进入腹足纲时,中间宿主就会被感染。异常宿主或死胡同宿主偶然(或可能有意)摄入受感染的腹足类中间宿主通常会导致该动物死亡。我们提供了照片证据,描述了从受感染的白尾鹿传播到驼鹿的潜在机制,迄今为止文献中尚未对此进行研究。我们在美国明尼苏达州东北部Grand Portage印第安人保留地周围的矿物舔舐点部署了远程摄像机。我们观察到白尾鹿在矿物舔舐点排便,而食地驼鹿在同一地点排便。我们假设,在这个系统中,矿物舔舐可能是鹿和驼鹿之间传播细尾蟾蜍的一个巢穴,并呼吁进一步研究矿物舔舔在寄生虫传播中的潜在作用。苏必利尔奇佩瓦湖大门户地带是美国明尼苏达州东北部一个联邦认可的印第安人部落,通过自给狩猎和捕鱼自豪地行使其粮食主权。驼鹿(驼鹿)是大波蒂奇部落Anishinaabeg(人)历史上和现在使用的主要自给食物。因此,管理和研究将驼鹿种群作为一个重要的生存物种,为本文研究白尾鹿和驼鹿之间通过共同使用矿物舔舐传播疾病的可能性奠定了基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mineral licks as a potential nidus for parasite transmission

Discrete landscape features can concentrate animals in time and space, leading to non-random interspecific encounters. These encounters have implications for predator-prey interactions, habitat selection, intraspecific competition, and transmission of parasites and other pathogens. The lifecycle of the parasitic nematode Parelaphostrongylus tenuis requires an intermediate host of a terrestrial gastropod. Natural hosts of P. tenuis are white-tailed deer, and an aberrant host of conservation concern is moose, which are susceptible to high levels of mortality as a naive host to the parasite. Intermediate hosts become infected when P. tenuis larvae are shed in deer feces, then consumed or enter the gastropod through the foot. Incidental (or perhaps intentional) ingestion of infected gastropod intermediate hosts by aberrant or dead-end hosts often results in mortality of that animal. We present photographic evidence depicting a potential mechanism for transmission from infected white-tailed deer to moose, heretofore not examined in the literature. We deployed remote cameras at mineral licks around Grand Portage Indian Reservation in northeastern Minnesota, USA. We observed white-tailed deer defecating at mineral lick sites and geophagous moose at the same sites. We hypothesize that mineral licks may act as a nidus for P. tenuis transmission between deer and moose in this system and call for further research into the potential role of mineral licks in parasite transmission.

The Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa is a federally recognized Indian tribe in extreme northeastern Minnesota, USA, and proudly exercises its rights to food sovereignty through subsistence hunting and fishing. Mooz (Moose) are a primary subsistence food used by the Anishinaabeg (people) of Grand Portage Band historically and presently. Management for and research on maintaining this moose population as a vital subsistence species thus sets the context for this paper examining potential for disease transmission between white-tailed deer and moose through shared use of mineral licks.

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来源期刊
Food Webs
Food Webs Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
42
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