Identifying the factors that affect host-parasite interactions is essential for understanding the ecology and dynamics of vector-borne diseases and may be an important component of predicting human disease risk. Characteristics of hosts themselves (e.g., body condition, host behavior, immune defenses) may affect the likelihood of parasitism. However, despite highly variable rates of parasitism and infection in wild populations, identifying widespread links between individual characteristics and heterogeneity in parasite acquisition has proven challenging because many zoonoses exist over wide geographic extents and exhibit both spatial and temporal heterogeneity in prevalence and individual and population-level effects. Using seven years of data collected by the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), we examined relationships among individual host condition, behavior, and parasitism by Ixodid ticks in a keystone host species, the white-footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus. We found that individual condition, specifically sex, body mass, and reproductive condition, had both direct and indirect effects on parasitism by ticks, but the nature of these effects differed for parasitism by larval versus nymphal ticks. We also found that condition differences influenced rodent behavior, and behavior directly affected the rates of parasitism, with individual mice that moved farther being more likely to carry ticks. This study illustrates how individual-level data can be examined using large-scale datasets to draw inference and uncover broad patterns in host-parasite encounters at unprecedented spatial scales. Our results suggest that intraspecific variation in the movement ecology of hosts may affect host-parasite encounter rates and, ultimately, alter zoonotic disease risk through anthropogenic modifications and natural environmental conditions that alter host space use.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4478 | DOI Listing |
Vet Parasitol
December 2024
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
The equine bloodworm, Strongylus vulgaris, is a common and highly pathogenic parasite in horses due to its migratory life cycle involving the intestinal arteries. Current diagnostic techniques cannot detect the prepatent migrating stages of S. vulgaris, highlighting the need for new biomarkers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasite Immunol
December 2024
Department of Infectious Diseases, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Gastrointestinal helminths interact with the gut microbiota in ways that shape microbiota structure and function, but these effects are highly inconsistent across studies. One factor that may help explain variation in parasite-microbiota interactions is host sex since helminths can induce sex-specific changes in feeding behaviour and diet that might cascade to shape gut microbial communities. We tested this idea using an anthelmintic treatment experiment in wild Grant's gazelles (Nanger granti).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
December 2024
Institute for Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, 07743 Jena, Germany.
Diatoms are single-celled photosynthetic eukaryotes responsible for CO fixation and primary production in aquatic ecosystems. The cosmopolitan marine diatom can form seasonal blooms in coastal areas and interact with various microorganisms, including the parasitic oomycete . This unicellular eukaryote is mainly present in the northern hemisphere as an obligate parasite of the genus Understanding the interplay of abiotic factors such as temperature and biotic factors like parasitism on algal physiology is crucial as it dictates plankton community composition and is especially relevant during environmental changes and warming events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA prerequisite of genetic rescue in endangered and genetically depauperate populations is to pre-evaluate between possible pros and cons of hybridization for the life history and survival of the target population. We hybridized the critically endangered Saimaa landlocked salmon ( m. ) with one of its geographically closest relatives, anadromous Baltic salmon from River Kymijoki.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Parasitol
December 2024
Departamento de Biología Marina, Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán, C.P. 97100, Mérida, Yucatán, México.
Although harvest of Octopus maya (Mexican four-eyed octopus) is one of the most important fisheries in the Yucatan Peninsula, little is known about the parasites of these cephalopods and how they affect host physiological processes. We analyzed the spatio-temporal variation of infection of O. maya by the cestode larva Prochristianella sp.
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