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Parasite Abundance‐Occupancy Relationships Across Biogeographic Regions: Joint Effects of Niche Breadth, Host Availability and Climate

Konstans Wells Orcid Logo, Jeffrey A. Bell Orcid Logo, Alan Fecchio Orcid Logo, Serguei Drovetski Orcid Logo, Spencer Galen Orcid Logo, Shannon Hackett Orcid Logo, Holly Lutz Orcid Logo, Heather R. Skeen Orcid Logo, Gary Voelker Orcid Logo, Wanyoike Wamiti Orcid Logo, Jason D. Weckstein Orcid Logo, Nicholas J. Clark Orcid Logo

Journal of Biogeography

Swansea University Author: Konstans Wells Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/jbi.15015

Abstract

Aim: Changing biodiversity and environmental conditions may allow multi-host pathogens to spread among host species and affect prevalence. There are several widely acknowledged theories about mechanisms that may influence variation in pathogen prevalence, including the controversially debated diluti...

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Published in: Journal of Biogeography
ISSN: 0305-0270 1365-2699
Published: Wiley 2024
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67780
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Abstract: Aim: Changing biodiversity and environmental conditions may allow multi-host pathogens to spread among host species and affect prevalence. There are several widely acknowledged theories about mechanisms that may influence variation in pathogen prevalence, including the controversially debated dilution effect and abundance-occupancy relationship hypotheses. Here, we explore such abundance-occupancy relationships for unique lineages of three vector-borne avian blood parasite genera (the avian malaria parasite Plasmodium and the related haemosporidian parasites Parahaemoproteus and Leucocytozoon) across biogeographical regions.Location: Nearctic-Neotropical and Palearctic-Afrotropical regions.Methods: We compiled a cross-continental dataset of 17,116 bird individuals surveyed from 46 bird assemblages across the Nearctic-Neotropical and Palearctic-Afrotropical regions and explored relationships between local parasite lineage prevalence and host assemblage metrics in a Bayesian random regression framework.Results: Most lineages from these three genera infected ≥ 5 host species and exhibited clear phylogenetic or functional host specificity. Lineage prevalence from all three genera increased with host range, but also with higher degrees of specialisation to phylogenetically or functionally related host species. Local avian community features were also found to be important drivers of prevalence. For example, bird species richness was positively correlated with lineage prevalence for Plasmodium and Leucocytozoon, whereas higher relative abundances of the main host species were associated with lower prevalence for Plasmodium and Parahaemoproteus but higher prevalence for Leucocytozoon.Conclusions: Our results broadly support several of the leading hypotheses about mechanisms that influence pathogen prevalence, including the niche breadth hypothesis in that higher avian host species diversity and broader host range amplify prevalence through increasing ecological opportunities and the trade-off hypotheses in that specialisation among subsets of available host species may increase prevalence. Furthermore, the three studied avian haemosporidian genera exhibited different abundance-occupancy relationships across the major global climate gradients and in relation to host availability, emphasising that these relationships do not strictly follow common rules for vector-borne parasites with different life histories.
Keywords: avian malaria; host specificity; infectious disease risk; parasite dilution effect; parasite spread
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: Royal Society research grant RGS\R2\222152 Australian Research Council DE210101439