AI Article Synopsis

  • Parasites play a crucial role in ecosystems but are often ignored; understanding their relationships with hosts, especially in changing climates, is essential for ecological dynamics.
  • Studying gray wolves as a model, researchers found that higher wolf density increased the prevalence of certain parasites, while greater prey diversity surprisingly led to lower parasite prevalence.
  • Specific parasites like hookworms can harm wolves, particularly young ones; the study indicates that biodiversity might help regulate disease effects on predator populations, suggesting a complex interaction between food variety and parasite management.

Article Abstract

Parasites are integral to ecosystem functioning yet often overlooked. Improved understanding of host-parasite associations is important, particularly for wide-ranging species for which host range shifts and climate change could alter host-parasite interactions and their effects on ecosystem function.Among the most widely distributed mammals with diverse diets, gray wolves () host parasites that are transmitted among canids and via prey species. Wolf-parasite associations may therefore influence the population dynamics and ecological functions of both wolves and their prey. Our goal was to identify large-scale processes that shape host-parasite interactions across populations, with the wolf as a model organism.By compiling data from various studies, we examined the fecal prevalence of gastrointestinal parasites in six wolf populations from two continents in relation to wolf density, diet diversity, and other ecological conditions.As expected, we found that the fecal prevalence of parasites transmitted directly to wolves via contact with other canids or their excreta was positively associated with wolf density. Contrary to our expectations, the fecal prevalence of parasites transmitted via prey was negatively associated with prey diversity. We also found that parasite communities reflected landscape characteristics and specific prey items available to wolves.Several parasite taxa identified in this study, including hookworms and coccidian protozoans, can cause morbidity and mortality in canids, especially in pups, or in combination with other stressors. The density-prevalence relationship for parasites with simple life cycles may reflect a regulatory role of gastrointestinal parasites on wolf populations. Our result that fecal prevalence of parasites was lower in wolves with more diverse diets could provide insight into the mechanisms by which biodiversity may regulate disease. A diverse suite of predator-prey interactions could regulate the effects of parasitism on prey populations and mitigate the transmission of infectious agents, including zoonoses, spread via trophic interactions.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8328421PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7837DOI Listing

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