Literature DB >> 11513888

Nested assemblages resulting from host size variation: the case of endoparasite communities in fish hosts.

R Poulin1, E T Valtonen.   

Abstract

Nested species subsets are a common pattern in many types of communities found in insular or fragmented habitats. Nestedness occurs in some communities of ectoparasites of fish, as does the exact opposite departure from random assembly, anti-nestedness. Here, we looked for nested and anti-nested patterns in the species composition of communities of internal parasites of 23 fish populations from two localities in Finland. We also compared various community parameters of nested and anti-nested assemblages of parasites, and determined whether nestedness may result simply from a size-related accumulation of parasite species by feeding fish hosts. Nested parasite communities were characterised by higher prevalence (proportion of infected fish) and intensities of infection (number of parasites per fish) than anti-nested communities; the two types of non-random communities did not differ with respect to parasite species richness, however. In addition, the correlation between fish size and the number of parasite species harboured by individual fish was much stronger in nested assemblages than in anti-nested ones, where it was often nil. These results were shown not to be artefacts of sampling effort or host phylogeny. They apply to both assemblages of adult and larval parasites, which were treated separately. Since species of larval parasites are extremely unlikely to interact with one another in fish hosts, the establishment of nestedness appears independent of the potential action of interspecific interactions. The species composition of these parasite communities is not determined from within the community, but rather by the extrinsic influence of host feeding rates and how they amplify differences among parasite species in probabilities of colonisation or extinction. Nested patterns occur in parasite communities whose fish hosts accumulate parasites in a predictable fashion proportional to their size, whereas anti-nested communities occur in parasite communities whose fish hosts do not, possibly because of dietary specialisation preventing them from sampling the entire pool of parasite species available locally. Thus, nestedness in parasite communities may result from processes somewhat different from those generating nested patterns in free-living communities.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11513888     DOI: 10.1016/s0020-7519(01)00262-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Parasitol        ISSN: 0020-7519            Impact factor:   3.981


  6 in total

1.  Parasite species coexistence and limiting similarity: a multiscale look at phylogenetic, functional and reproductive distances.

Authors:  David Mouillot; Andrea Simková; Serge Morand; Robert Poulin
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2005-10-28       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Community structure of helminth parasites in two closely related South African rodents differing in sociality and spatial behaviour.

Authors:  Andrea Spickett; Kerstin Junker; Boris R Krasnov; Voitto Haukisalmi; Sonja Matthee
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 2.289

3.  Spatial-temporal variation of parasites in Cnemidophorus ocellifer (Teiidae) and Tropidurus hispidus and Tropidurus semitaeniatus (Tropiduridae) from Caatinga areas in northeastern Brazil.

Authors:  Samuel V Brito; Felipe S Ferreira; Samuel C Ribeiro; Luciano A Anjos; Waltécio O Almeida; Daniel O Mesquita; Alexandre Vasconcellos
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2014-01-31       Impact factor: 2.289

4.  Metazoan parasite community of blue sea catfish, Sciades guatemalensis (Ariidae), from Tres Palos Lagoon, Guerrero, Mexico.

Authors:  Juan Violante-González; Ma Leopoldina Aguirre-Macedo; Agustín Rojas-Herrera; Salvador Gil Guerrero
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2009-06-23       Impact factor: 2.289

5.  Linking community assembly and structure across scales in a wild mouse parasite community.

Authors:  Evelyn C Rynkiewicz; Andy Fenton; Amy B Pedersen
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-12-09       Impact factor: 2.912

6.  Nestedness of ectoparasite-vertebrate host networks.

Authors:  Sean P Graham; Hassan K Hassan; Nathan D Burkett-Cadena; Craig Guyer; Thomas R Unnasch
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-11-18       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.