4.4 Article

Phenological and intrinsic predictors of mite and haemacoccidian infection dynamics in a Mediterranean community of lizards

期刊

PARASITOLOGY
卷 148, 期 11, 页码 1328-1338

出版社

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0031182021000858

关键词

Ecological interactions; host-parasite dynamics; Iberian Peninsula; Lacertidae; parasite phenology

资金

  1. Val I + D predoctoral grant of the Ministry of Education, Investigation, Culture and Sport of the Regional Government of Valencia [ACIF/2016/331]
  2. European Social Fund
  3. MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE [PGC2018-097426-B-C21]
  4. ICETA - Instituto de Ciencias, Tecnologias e Agroambiente da Universidade do Porto [CEECIND/04084/2017]
  5. Fundacao da Ciencia e Tecnologia

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the temporal host-parasite dynamics in a lizard community in Eastern Spain over an entire annual activity period. The results suggest that habitat type is the only predictor explaining the abundance of all parasites, with parasite abundance generally higher in forests than in dunes.
Ectotherms are vulnerable to environmental changes and their parasites are biological health indicators. Thus, parasite load in ectotherms is expected to show a marked phenology. This study investigates temporal host-parasite dynamics in a lizard community in Eastern Spain during an entire annual activity period. The hosts investigated were Acanthodactylus erythrurus, Psammodromus algirus and Psammodromus edwardsianus, three lizard species coexisting in a mixed habitat of forests and dunes, providing a range of body sizes, ecological requirements and life history traits. Habitat and climate were considered as potential environmental predictors of parasite abundance, while size, body condition and sex as intrinsic predictors. Linear models based on robust estimates were fitted to analyse parasite abundance and prevalence. Ectoparasitic mites and blood parasites from two haemococcidian genera were found: Lankesterella spp. and Schellackia spp. Habitat type was the only predictor explaining the abundance of all parasites, being mostly higher in the forest than in the dunes. The results suggest that particularities in each host-parasite relationship should be accounted even when parasites infect close-related hosts under the same environmental pressures. They also support that lizard parasites can be biomarkers of environmental perturbation, but the relationships need to be carefully interpreted for each host-parasite assemblage.

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