4.7 Article

Tropical rainforest flies carrying pathogens form stable associations with social nonhuman primates

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 28, 期 18, 页码 4242-4258

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15145

关键词

disease vector; polyspecific associations; sociality

资金

  1. DFG Research Group Sociality and Health in Primates [FOR2136]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research's Strategic Training Initiative in Health Research's Systems Biology Training Program
  3. NSERC Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS)
  4. German Academic Exchange Service [DAAD-91525837-57048249]
  5. DAAD
  6. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  7. European Union [605728]
  8. Max Planck Society

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Living in groups provides benefits but also incurs costs such as attracting disease vectors. For example, synanthropic flies associate with human settlements, and higher fly densities increase pathogen transmission. We investigated whether such associations also exist in highly mobile nonhuman primate (NHP) Groups. We studied flies in a group of wild sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys atys) and three communities of wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) in Tai National Park, Cote d'Ivoire. We observed markedly higher fly densities within both mangabey and chimpanzee groups. Using a mark-recapture experiment, we showed that flies stayed with the sooty mangabey group for up to 12 days and for up to 1.3 km. We also tested mangabey-associated flies for pathogens infecting mangabeys in this ecosystem, Bacillus cereus biovar anthracis (Bcbva), causing sylvatic anthrax, and Treponema pallidum pertenue, causing yaws. Flies contained treponemal (6/103) and Bcbva (7/103) DNA. We cultured Bcbva from all PCR-positive flies, confirming bacterial viability and suggesting that this bacterium might be transmitted and disseminated by flies. Whole genome sequences of Bcbva isolates revealed a diversity of Bcbva, probably derived from several sources. We conclude that flies actively track mangabeys and carry infectious bacterial pathogens; these associations represent an understudied cost of sociality and potentially expose many social animals to a diversity of pathogens.

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