4.5 Article

Molecular evidence for host-parasite co-speciation between lizards and Schellackia parasites

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR PARASITOLOGY
卷 48, 期 9-10, 页码 709-718

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2018.03.003

关键词

Co-evolution; Host-parasite interaction; Lacertidae; Molecular diversity; Schellackia; Specificity

资金

  1. European Regional Development Fund (MINECO/FEDER) [CGL2012-40026-C02-01, CGL2015-67789-C2-1-P, CGL2012-40026-C02-02, CGL2015-64086-P, CGL2014-53523-P, CGL2008-01522, CGL2012-32459, CGL2016-76918]
  2. European Regional Development Fund (MEC/FEDER) [CGL2008-00137/BOS]
  3. MEC [BES-2010-038427]
  4. Ministerio de Economia y Cornpetitividad
  5. Ministerio de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte
  6. [CGL2011-30393]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Current and past parasite transmission may depend on the overlap of host distributions, potentially affecting parasite specificity and co-evolutionary processes. Nonetheless, parasite diversification may take place in sympatry when parasites are transmitted by vectors with low mobility. Here, we test the co-speciation hypothesis between lizard final hosts of the Family Lacertidae, and blood parasites of the genus Schellackia, which are potentially transmitted by haematophagous mites. The effects of current distributional overlap of host species on parasite specificity are also investigated. We sampled 27 localities on the Iberian Peninsula and three in northern Africa, and collected blood samples from 981 individual lizards of seven genera and 18 species. The overall prevalence of infection by parasites of the genus Schellackia was similar to 35%. We detected 16 Schellackia haplotypes of the 18S rRNA gene, revealing that the genus Schellackia is more diverse than previously thought. Phylogenetic analyses showed that Schellackia haplotypes grouped into two main monophyletic Glades, the first including those detected in host species endemic to the Mediterranean region and the second those detected in host genera Acanthodactylus, Zootoca and Takydromus. All but one of the Schellackia haplotypes exhibited a high degree of host specificity at the generic level and 78.5% of them exclusively infected single host species. Some host species within the genera Podarcis (six species) and lberolacerta (two species) were infected by three non-specific haplotypes of Schellackia, suggesting that host switching might have positively influenced past diversification of the genus. However, the results supported the idea that current host switching is rare because there existed a significant positive correlation between the number of exclusive parasite haplotypes and the number of host species with current sympatric distribution. This result, together with significant support for host-parasite molecular co-speciation, suggests that parasites of the genus Schellackia co-evolved with their lizard hosts. (C) 2018 Australian Society for Parasitology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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