Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents

Identifying patterns with sufficient predictive power is a constant challenge for ecologists to address ecological problems related to species conservation, pollution or infectious disease control. During the last years, the amounts of parasitological studies in this sense increased, but they are st...

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Language:unknown
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
id ftunibueairesbd:paper:paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunibueairesbd:paper:paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke 2023-05-15T18:05:33+02:00 Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents 2018 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke unknown https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke Component community Compound community Ecology Infracommunity Parasites Urbanization Zoonosis 2018 ftunibueairesbd https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke 2023-02-16T02:17:41Z Identifying patterns with sufficient predictive power is a constant challenge for ecologists to address ecological problems related to species conservation, pollution or infectious disease control. During the last years, the amounts of parasitological studies in this sense increased, but they are still scarce in urban environments. The main aim of this study was to investigate if the helminth communities of urban rodents are structured within host assembly (compound community) or they are a result of random events occurring at each individual host scale (infracommunity). A total of 203 rodents belonging to four species, Rattus rattus (Linnaeus), Rattus norvegicus (Berkenhout), Mus musculus Linnaeus and the native Oligoryzomys flavescens (Waterhouse) and captured in different landscape units of the City of Buenos Aires (industrial-residential neighbourhoods, shantytowns and parklands) were analysed. The results showed that infracommunities could be grouped according to composition and relative abundances and that they respond to the structure of the host community. Thus, the component communities defined in this study could be identified as subsets of the compound community (rodent assemblage) and infracommunities (each host) as random samples within each one. Quantitative differences among component communities were denoted by comparing the infection levels of helminths described as central species. Therefore, infracommunities of R. norvegicus and O. flavescens were the most predictable because of the high abundance of the nematodes Heterakis spumosa Schneider, 1866 and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis (Travassos, 1914), and Stilestrongylus flavescens (Sutton et Durette-Desset, 1991), respectively. Several mechanisms contribute to complexity of the structure of parasite communities, where specific parasites, definitive and intermediate hosts, and environmental and anthropogenic factors all play a role in the dynamics of the compound community. © 2018, Czech Academy of Sciences. Other/Unknown Material Rattus rattus Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires) Waterhouse ENVELOPE(155.700,155.700,-81.417,-81.417)
institution Open Polar
collection Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
op_collection_id ftunibueairesbd
language unknown
topic Component community
Compound community
Ecology
Infracommunity
Parasites
Urbanization
Zoonosis
spellingShingle Component community
Compound community
Ecology
Infracommunity
Parasites
Urbanization
Zoonosis
Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
topic_facet Component community
Compound community
Ecology
Infracommunity
Parasites
Urbanization
Zoonosis
description Identifying patterns with sufficient predictive power is a constant challenge for ecologists to address ecological problems related to species conservation, pollution or infectious disease control. During the last years, the amounts of parasitological studies in this sense increased, but they are still scarce in urban environments. The main aim of this study was to investigate if the helminth communities of urban rodents are structured within host assembly (compound community) or they are a result of random events occurring at each individual host scale (infracommunity). A total of 203 rodents belonging to four species, Rattus rattus (Linnaeus), Rattus norvegicus (Berkenhout), Mus musculus Linnaeus and the native Oligoryzomys flavescens (Waterhouse) and captured in different landscape units of the City of Buenos Aires (industrial-residential neighbourhoods, shantytowns and parklands) were analysed. The results showed that infracommunities could be grouped according to composition and relative abundances and that they respond to the structure of the host community. Thus, the component communities defined in this study could be identified as subsets of the compound community (rodent assemblage) and infracommunities (each host) as random samples within each one. Quantitative differences among component communities were denoted by comparing the infection levels of helminths described as central species. Therefore, infracommunities of R. norvegicus and O. flavescens were the most predictable because of the high abundance of the nematodes Heterakis spumosa Schneider, 1866 and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis (Travassos, 1914), and Stilestrongylus flavescens (Sutton et Durette-Desset, 1991), respectively. Several mechanisms contribute to complexity of the structure of parasite communities, where specific parasites, definitive and intermediate hosts, and environmental and anthropogenic factors all play a role in the dynamics of the compound community. © 2018, Czech Academy of Sciences.
title Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
title_short Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
title_full Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
title_fullStr Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
title_full_unstemmed Structure of parasite communities in urban environments: The case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
title_sort structure of parasite communities in urban environments: the case of helminths in synanthropic rodents
publishDate 2018
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
long_lat ENVELOPE(155.700,155.700,-81.417,-81.417)
geographic Waterhouse
geographic_facet Waterhouse
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_00155683_v65_n_p_Hancke
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