Schistosome parasites cause a chronic inflammatory disease in humans, and recent studies have emphasized the importance of control programs for understanding the aquatic phases of schistosomiasis transmission. The host-seeking behavior of larval schistosomes (miracidia) for their snail intermediate hosts plays a critical role in parasite transmission. Using field-derived strains of Kenyan snails and parasites, we tested two main hypotheses: (1) Parasites prefer the most compatible host, and (2) parasites avoid hosts that are already infected. We tested preference to three host snail taxa (, , and ), using allopatric and sympatric isolates and two different nonhost snail species that co-occur with , , and . We also tested whether schistosomes avoid snail hosts that are already infected by another trematode species and whether competitive dominance played a role in their behavior. Preference was assessed using two-way choice chambers and by visually counting parasites that moved toward competing stimuli. In pairwise comparisons, we found that did not always prefer the more compatible snail taxon, but never favored an incompatible host over a compatible host. While parasites preferred . to the nonhost species , they did not significantly prefer versus . , an introduced species in Kenya. Finally, we demonstrated that parasites avoid infected snails if the resident parasite was competitively dominant ( sp.), and preferred snails infected with subordinates (xiphidiocercariae) to uninfected snails. These results provide evidence of "fine tuning" in the ability of schistosome miracidia to detect hosts; however, they did not always select hosts that would maximize fitness. Appreciating such discriminatory abilities could lead to a better understanding of how ecosystem host and parasite diversity influences disease transmission and could provide novel control mechanisms to improve human health.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9592064 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4004 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!