Artículo de revista
Introduced species: domestic mammals are more significant transmitters of parasites to native mammals than are feral mammals
Fecha
2014Registro en:
International Journal for Parasitology 44 (2014) 243–249
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2013.12.002
Autor
Landaeta Aqueveque, Carlos
Henríquez, Anaía
Cattan Ayala, Pedro
Institución
Resumen
The study of parasitism related to biological invasion has focused on attributes and impacts of parasites
as invaders and the impact of introduced hosts on endemic parasitism. Thus, there is currently no study
of the attributes of hosts which influence the invasiveness of parasites. We aimed to determine whether
the degree of domestication of introduced mammalian species – feral introduced mammals, livestock or
pets, hereafter ‘D’ – is important in the spillover of introduced parasites. The literature on introduced parasites
of mammals in Chile was reviewed. We designed an index for estimating the relevance of the introduced
host species to parasite spillover and determined whether the D of introduced mammals predicted
this index. A total of 223 introduced parasite species were found. Our results indicate that domestic
mammals have a higher number of introduced parasites and spillover parasites, and the index indicates
that these mammals, particularly pets, are more relevant introducers than introduced feral mammals.
Further analyses indicated that the higher impact is due to higher parasite richness, a longer time since
introduction and wider dispersal, as well as how these mammals are maintained. The greater relevance of
domestic mammals is important given that they are basically the same species distributed worldwide
and can become the main transmitters of parasites to native mammals elsewhere. This finding also
underlines the feasibility of management in order to reduce the transmission of parasites to native fauna
through anti-parasitic treatment of domestic mammals, animal-ownership education and the prevention
of importing new parasite species.