The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species

Aim: Geographic spread and range expansion of species into novel environments may merge originally separated species assemblages, yet the possible drivers of geographic heterogeneity in host-parasite associations remain poorly understood. Here, we examine global patterns in the parasite assemblages...

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Published in:Diversity and Distributions
Main Authors: Wells, Konstans, O'Hara, Robert B., Morand, Serge, Lessard, Jean-Philippe, Ribas, Alexis
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10072/171743
https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12297
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spelling ftgriffithuniv:oai:research-repository.griffith.edu.au:10072/171743 2023-05-15T18:05:38+02:00 The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species Wells, Konstans O'Hara, Robert B. Morand, Serge Lessard, Jean-Philippe Ribas, Alexis 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/10072/171743 https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12297 English eng Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Diversity and Distributions Community Ecology Journal article 2015 ftgriffithuniv https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12297 2018-07-30T11:05:56Z Aim: Geographic spread and range expansion of species into novel environments may merge originally separated species assemblages, yet the possible drivers of geographic heterogeneity in host-parasite associations remain poorly understood. Here, we examine global patterns in the parasite assemblages of two rat species and explore the role of parasite acquisition from local pools of host species. Location: Global. Methods: We compiled a global data set of helminth parasites (n = 241 species) from two rat species (Rattus rattus species complex, R. norvegicus) and, concomitantly, from all other mammal species known to be infected by the same parasites. We used an inverse Bayesian modelling approach to explicitly link species-level to community-level infestation probabilities at different geographic scales and alleviate the shortcoming of sampling bias. Results: Patterns of species richness and turnover of parasites in the two focal rat species revealed clear biogeographic structure with lowest species richness and most distinct assemblages in Madagascar and highest species richness and least distinct assemblages in the Palaearctic region. Parasite species richness and turnover across regions were correlated for the two focal hosts, although they were associated with distinct assemblages within regions. Infection probability of a focal host with any given parasite was clearly related to infection probability of the local species pool of wildlife hosts with that same parasite. Infection probability of other mammal species infected with these parasite species, in turn, decreased with their taxonomic distance to the genus Rattus. Main conclusions: Our study demonstrates the importance of spillover of parasites from local wildlife hosts to invasive rats on global patterns of host-parasite associations. Considering both changes in local pools of host species and the global distributions of parasite and pathogen diversity in consistent model frameworks may therefore advance the forecasting of species-level infestation patterns and the possible risk of disease emergence from local to global scale. No Full Text Article in Journal/Newspaper Rattus rattus Griffith University: Griffith Research Online Diversity and Distributions 21 4 477 486
institution Open Polar
collection Griffith University: Griffith Research Online
op_collection_id ftgriffithuniv
language English
topic Community Ecology
spellingShingle Community Ecology
Wells, Konstans
O'Hara, Robert B.
Morand, Serge
Lessard, Jean-Philippe
Ribas, Alexis
The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
topic_facet Community Ecology
description Aim: Geographic spread and range expansion of species into novel environments may merge originally separated species assemblages, yet the possible drivers of geographic heterogeneity in host-parasite associations remain poorly understood. Here, we examine global patterns in the parasite assemblages of two rat species and explore the role of parasite acquisition from local pools of host species. Location: Global. Methods: We compiled a global data set of helminth parasites (n = 241 species) from two rat species (Rattus rattus species complex, R. norvegicus) and, concomitantly, from all other mammal species known to be infected by the same parasites. We used an inverse Bayesian modelling approach to explicitly link species-level to community-level infestation probabilities at different geographic scales and alleviate the shortcoming of sampling bias. Results: Patterns of species richness and turnover of parasites in the two focal rat species revealed clear biogeographic structure with lowest species richness and most distinct assemblages in Madagascar and highest species richness and least distinct assemblages in the Palaearctic region. Parasite species richness and turnover across regions were correlated for the two focal hosts, although they were associated with distinct assemblages within regions. Infection probability of a focal host with any given parasite was clearly related to infection probability of the local species pool of wildlife hosts with that same parasite. Infection probability of other mammal species infected with these parasite species, in turn, decreased with their taxonomic distance to the genus Rattus. Main conclusions: Our study demonstrates the importance of spillover of parasites from local wildlife hosts to invasive rats on global patterns of host-parasite associations. Considering both changes in local pools of host species and the global distributions of parasite and pathogen diversity in consistent model frameworks may therefore advance the forecasting of species-level infestation patterns and the possible risk of disease emergence from local to global scale. No Full Text
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wells, Konstans
O'Hara, Robert B.
Morand, Serge
Lessard, Jean-Philippe
Ribas, Alexis
author_facet Wells, Konstans
O'Hara, Robert B.
Morand, Serge
Lessard, Jean-Philippe
Ribas, Alexis
author_sort Wells, Konstans
title The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
title_short The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
title_full The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
title_fullStr The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
title_full_unstemmed The importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
title_sort importance of parasite geography and spillover effects for global patterns of host–parasite associations in two invasive species
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10072/171743
https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12297
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation Diversity and Distributions
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/ddi.12297
container_title Diversity and Distributions
container_volume 21
container_issue 4
container_start_page 477
op_container_end_page 486
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