Searching for common patterns in parasite ecology: species and host contributions to beta-diversity in helminths of South African ungulates and fleas of South American rodents

Ivan G. Horak, Joop Boomker, Vasily I. Grabovsky, Irina S. Khokhlova, Kerstin Junker, Juliana P. Sanchez, M. Fernanda López Berrizbeitia, Boris R. Krasnov

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We searched for common patterns in parasite ecology by investigating species and host contributions to the beta-diversity of infracommunities (=assemblages of parasites harboured by a host individual) in helminths of three species of South African ungulates and fleas of 11 species of South American rodents, assuming that a comparison of patterns in distinctly different parasites and hosts would allow us to judge the generality or, at least, commonness of these patterns. We used data on species’ composition and numbers of parasites and asked whether (i) parasite species’ attributes (life cycle, transmission mode, and host specificity in helminths; possession of sclerotized combs, microhabitat preference, and host specificity in fleas) or their population structure (mean abundance and/or prevalence) and (ii) host characteristics (sex and age) affect parasite and host species’ contributions to parasite beta-diversity (SCBD and HCBD, respectively). We found that parasite species’ morphological and ecological attributes were mostly not associated with their SCBD. In contrast, parasite SCBD, in both ungulates and rodents, significantly increased with either parasite mean abundance or prevalence or both. The effect of host characteristics on HCBD was detected in a few hosts only. In general, parasite infracommunities’ beta-diversity appeared to be driven by variation in parasite species rather than the uniqueness of the assemblages harboured by individual hosts. We conclude that some ecological patterns (such as the relationships between SCBD and parasite abundance/prevalence) appear to be common and do not differ between different host-parasite associations in different geographic regions, whereas other patterns (the relationships between SCBD and parasite species’ attributes) are contingent and depend on parasite and host identities.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)429-439
Number of pages11
JournalInternational Journal for Parasitology
Volume54
Issue number8-9
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 2024

Keywords

  • Beta-diversity
  • Contribution
  • Fleas
  • Helminths
  • Hosts
  • Parasites
  • Rodents
  • Ungulates

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Infectious Diseases
  • Parasitology

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