4.7 Article

Equal rights for parasites: Windsor 1995, revisited after ecological parasitology has come of age

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 284, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110174

Keywords

Parasite; Biodiversity knowledge shortfall; Scientific ignorance; Poulin's uncertainty principle; Conservation assessment; IUCN green and red lists

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The lack of data on biodiversity patterns and their drivers, particularly for well-studied organisms, poses a challenge for fully understanding biological characteristics. This problem is exacerbated when it comes to parasites, which are often overlooked despite their significant role in ecosystems. Parasites have both positive and negative impacts, and a comprehensive understanding of their importance is crucial for conservation and ecosystem management. A case study on fish host-helminth parasites in Mexico highlights the need to address knowledge gaps and change negative perceptions towards parasites through outreach and education.
Lack of data to properly model key biological characteristics like abundance or distribution, seriously hinder comprehension of biodiversity patterns and their drivers - even for historically well-studied and charismatic organisms. Knowledge shortfalls are more extreme in the case of parasites, which are mostly part of the hidden biodiversity and generally have a bad reputation. However, being an extremely large portion of biodiversity and a fundamental part of ecosystems, failure to consider parasites is itself an information shortfall for conservation, and can result in important consequences not only for planning strategies to conserve biological diversity, but also to understand fully the patterns and processes that shape ecosystems. Parasites exhibit a marked duality: while some species are pathogenic and do compromise their host's survival (and human interests), the majority exert apparently negligible negative effects on their hosts and could be considered non-pathogenic; indeed, parasites are beneficial as they provide important ecosystemic functions and services. Using a comprehensive dataset of fish host-helminth parasites in Mexico as a case study, we review knowledge shortfalls relating to parasites, exemplifying their impacts - both positive and negative. A holistic appreciation of parasites should consider both their (many) beneficial and (a few, proven) detrimental impacts, something which could be operationally incorporated into conservation assessments and strategies (e.g., IUCN Green and Red Lists, respectively). Outreach and education are key to modify negative perceptions towards parasites, and to induce recognition of their importance for ecosystemic function and structure.

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