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1.
001-es BibID:
BIBFORM121258
035-os BibID:
(Scopus)85188084613
Első szerző:
Jones, William
Cím:
Sympatry in a nightingale contact zone has no effect on host-specific blood parasite prevalence and lineage diversity / William Jones, Radka Reifová, Jiří Reif, Petr Synek, Michal Šíma, Pavel Munclinger
Dátum:
2024
ISSN:
0020-7519
Megjegyzések:
Parasites are a key driving force behind many ecological and evolutionary processes. Prevalence and diversity of parasites, as well as their effects on hosts, are not uniform across host species. As such, the potential parasite spillover between species can significantly influence outcomes of interspecific interactions. We screened two species of Luscinia nightingales for haemosporidian blood parasites (Plasmodium, Leucocytozoon and Haemoproteus) along an approximately 3000 km transect in Europe, incorporating areas of host distant allopatry, close allopatry and sympatry. We found significant differences in infection rates between the two host species, with common nightingales having much lower parasite prevalence than thrush nightingales (36.7% versus 83.8%). This disparity was mostly driven by Haemoproteus prevalence, which was significantly higher in thrush nightingales while common nightingales had a small, but significantly higher, Plasmodium prevalence. Furthermore, we found no effect of proximity to the contact zone on infection rate in either host species. Despite having lower infection prevalence, common nightingales were infected with a significantly higher diversity of parasite lineages than thrush nightingales, and lineage assemblages differed considerably between the two species, even in sympatry. This pattern was mostly driven by the large diversity of comparatively rare lineages, while the most abundant lineages were shared between the two host species. This suggests that, despite the close evolutionary relationships between the two nightingales, there are significant differences in parasite prevalence and diversity, regardless of the distance from the contact zone. This suggests that spillover of haemosporidian blood parasites is unlikely to contribute towards interspecific interactions in this system.
Tárgyszavak:
Természettudományok
Biológiai tudományok
idegen nyelvű folyóiratközlemény külföldi lapban
folyóiratcikk
Birds
Community ecology
Disease biology
Host-parasite interactions
Hybridisation
Parasitology
Megjelenés:
International Journal For Parasitology. - 54 (2024), p. 357-366. -
További szerzők:
Reifová, Radka
Reif, Jiří
Synek, Petr
Šíma, Michal
Munclinger, Pavel
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