info:eu-repo/semantics/article
An inverse latitudinal gradient in infection probability and phylogenetic diversity for Leucocytozoon blood parasites in New World birds
Fecha
2020-02Registro en:
Fecchio, Alan; Bell, Jeffrey; Bosholn, Mariane; Vaughan, Jefferson; Tkach, Vasyl; et al.; An inverse latitudinal gradient in infection probability and phylogenetic diversity for Leucocytozoon blood parasites in New World birds; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Journal Of Animal Ecology; 89; 2; 2-2020; 423-435
0021-8790
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Fecchio, Alan
Bell, Jeffrey
Bosholn, Mariane
Vaughan, Jefferson
Tkach, Vasyl
Lutz, Holly
Cueto, Víctor
Gorosito, Cristian Andrés
González-Acuña, Daniel
Stromlund, Chad
Kvasager, Danielle
Comiche, Kiba
Kirchgatter, Karin
Pinho, João
Berv, Jacob
Anciães, Marina
Fontana, Carla S.
Zyskowski, Kristof
Sampaio, Sidnei
Dispoto, Janice
Galen, Spencer
Weckstein, Jason
Clark, Nicholas
Resumen
Geographic variation in environmental conditions as well as host traits that promote parasite transmission may impact infection rates and community assembly of vector-transmitted parasites. Identifying the ecological, environmental and historical determinants of parasite distributions and diversity is therefore necessary to understand disease outbreaks under changing environments. Here, we identified the predictors and contributions of infection probability and phylogenetic diversity of Leucocytozoon (an avian blood parasite) at site and species levels across the New World. To explore spatial patterns in infection probability and lineage diversity for Leucocytozoon parasites, we surveyed 69 bird communities from Alaska to Patagonia. Using phylogenetic Bayesian hierarchical models and high-resolution satellite remote-sensing data, we determined the relative influence of climate, landscape, geography and host phylogeny on regional parasite community assembly. Infection rates and parasite diversity exhibited considerable variation across regions in the Americas. In opposition to the latitudinal gradient hypothesis, both the diversity and prevalence of Leucocytozoon parasites decreased towards the equator. Host relatedness and traits known to promote vector exposure neither predicted infection probability nor parasite diversity. Instead, the probability of a bird being infected with Leucocytozoon increased with increasing vegetation cover (NDVI) and moisture levels (NDWI), whereas the diversity of parasite lineages decreased with increasing NDVI. Infection rates and parasite diversity also tended to be higher in cooler regions and higher latitudes. Whereas temperature partially constrains Leucocytozoon diversity and infection rates, landscape features, such as vegetation cover and water body availability, play a significant role in modulating the probability of a bird being infected. This suggests that, for Leucocytozoon, the barriers to host shifting and parasite host range expansion are jointly determined by environmental filtering and landscape, but not by host phylogeny. Our results show that integrating host traits, host ancestry, bioclimatic data and microhabitat characteristics that are important for vector reproduction are imperative to understand and predict infection prevalence and diversity of vector-transmitted parasites. Unlike other vector-transmitted diseases, our results show that Leucocytozoon diversity and prevalence will likely decrease with warming temperatures.