4.8 Article

Invasive snails, parasite spillback, and potential parasite spillover drive parasitic diseases of Hippopotamus amphibius in artificial lakes of Zimbabwe

期刊

BMC BIOLOGY
卷 19, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12915-021-01093-2

关键词

Trematodiasis(1); Xenomonitoring(2); One Health(3); Barcoding(4); Artificial lake(5); Integrative taxonomy(6); Taxonomic impediment(7); Parasitology(8); Conservation(9); Biological invasions(10)

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资金

  1. Belgian Development Cooperation
  2. Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA)
  3. BRAIN-be 2.0 under the MicroResist project [B2/191/P1/MicroResist]
  4. VLIR-UOS travel grant [REI-2018-01-01]
  5. Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO) [11D7620N]
  6. FWO [11C5219N]

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This study found significant issues with trematode parasites on common hippopotami in artificial water systems in Zimbabwe, primarily due to biological invasions caused by human activities. This information indicates that human activities may expedite the decline of wild herbivore populations.
Background Humans impose a significant pressure on large herbivore populations, such as hippopotami, through hunting, poaching, and habitat destruction. Anthropogenic pressures can also occur indirectly, such as artificial lake creation and the subsequent introduction of invasive species that alter the ecosystem. These events can lead to drastic changes in parasite diversity and transmission, but generally receive little scientific attention. Results In order to document and identify trematode parasites of the common hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) in artificial water systems of Zimbabwe, we applied an integrative taxonomic approach, combining molecular diagnostics and morphometrics on archived and new samples. In doing so, we provide DNA reference sequences of the hippopotamus liver fluke Fasciola nyanzae, enabling us to construct the first complete Fasciola phylogeny. We describe parasite spillback of F. nyanzae by the invasive freshwater snail Pseudosuccinea columella, as a consequence of a cascade of biological invasions in Lake Kariba, one of the biggest artificial lakes in the world. Additionally, we report an unknown stomach fluke of the hippopotamus transmitted by the non-endemic snail Radix aff. plicatula, an Asian snail species that has not been found in Africa before, and the stomach fluke Carmyerius cruciformis transmitted by the native snail Bulinus truncatus. Finally, Biomphalaria pfeifferi and two Bulinus species were found as new snail hosts for the poorly documented hippopotamus blood fluke Schistosoma edwardiense. Conclusions Our findings indicate that artificial lakes are breeding grounds for endemic and non-endemic snails that transmit trematode parasites of the common hippopotamus. This has important implications, as existing research links trematode parasite infections combined with other stressors to declining wild herbivore populations. Therefore, we argue that monitoring the anthropogenic impact on parasite transmission should become an integral part of wildlife conservation efforts.

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