4.7 Article

Avian host composition, local speciation and dispersal drive the regional assembly of avian malaria parasites in South American birds

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 28, 期 10, 页码 2681-2693

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.15094

关键词

community assembly; disease ecology; latitudinal diversity gradient; macroecology; parasite biogeography; parasite dispersal

资金

  1. Programa de Pesquisa em Biodiversidade (PPBio)
  2. Sistema Nacional de Pesquisa em Biodiversidade (Sisbiota)
  3. Pantanal Research Center (CPP)/Instituto Nacional de Ciencias e Tecnologia em Areas Umidas (INAU)
  4. Geographical Genetics and Regional Planning for Natural Resources in Brazilian Cerrado (GENPAC)
  5. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq)
  6. US National Science Foundation [DEB-1503804, DEB-1120734]
  7. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Identifying the ecological factors that shape parasite distributions remains a central goal in disease ecology. These factors include dispersal capability, environmental filters and geographic distance. Using 520 haemosporidian parasite genetic lineages recovered from 7,534 birds sampled across tropical and temperate South America, we tested (a) the latitudinal diversity gradient hypothesis and (b) the distance-decay relationship (decreasing proportion of shared species between communities with increasing geographic distance) for this host-parasite system. We then inferred the biogeographic processes influencing the diversity and distributions of this cosmopolitan group of parasites across South America. We found support for a latitudinal gradient in diversity for avian haemosporidian parasites, potentially mediated through higher avian host diversity towards the equator. Parasite similarity was correlated with climate similarity, geographic distance and host composition. Local diversification in Amazonian lineages followed by dispersal was the most frequent biogeographic events reconstructed for haemosporidian parasites. Combining macroecological patterns and biogeographic processes, our study reveals that haemosporidian parasites are capable of circumventing geographic barriers and dispersing across biomes, although constrained by environmental filtering. The contemporary diversity and distributions of haemosporidian parasites are mainly driven by historical (speciation) and ecological (dispersal) processes, whereas the parasite community assembly is largely governed by host composition and to a lesser extent by environmental conditions.

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