4.5 Article

Intermediate host availability masks the strength of experimentally-derived colonisation patterns in echinostome trematodes

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages 585-590

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2008.10.008

Keywords

Host availability; Host colonisation; Experimental infections; Field infections; Trematodes; Echinostomes; Second intermediate hosts; Host specificity

Categories

Funding

  1. Indiana Academy of Sciences and Sigma Xi

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A fundamental goal of parasite evolutionary ecology is to elucidate patterns of host use and determine the underlying mechanisms of parasite colonisation. In order to distinguish the relative contributions of host encounter rates and host compatibility to infection outcomes, we compared host use in both field and experimental laboratory settings. Two years of bi-weekly snail sampling at a freshwater pond demonstrated fluctuating availability among three potential second intermediate snail host species and suggested that two trematode species (Echinostoma revolutum and Echinoparyphium sp.) did not colonise the three potential snail host species, Lymnaea elodes, Physa gyrina and Helisoma trivolvis, differentially. However, a series of experimental infections demonstrated that both parasites colonised H. trivolvis more so than the other two host species. Thus, more echinostome parasites utilised snail hosts that cannot serve as their first intermediate host. In experimental infections, host size and vagility were not strong determinants of infection. By utilising field and laboratory approaches, we were able to compare the strength of host compatibility under controlled conditions with patterns of infection in nature. Based on the results from these studies, it appears that host encounter is the primary mechanism dictating infection outcomes in the field. (C) 2008 Australian Society for Parasitology Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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