4.6 Article

Phanerozoic parasitism and marine metazoan diversity: dilution versus amplification

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0366

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paleoparasitology; biodiversity; Metazoa; paleopathology; Phanerozoic; marine disease

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资金

  1. FAU Emerging Talents Initative [SS16_NAT_11]
  2. NSF CAREER [EAR-1650745]
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung
  4. Institute for Advanced Studies-University of Bologna
  5. Paleontological Society Arthur J. Boucot research grant

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Research suggests that biodiversity influences parasite prevalence, with evidence of both amplification and dilution of parasitism at the macroevolutionary scale. Parasitism has increased over the Phanerozoic, primarily supporting the amplification hypothesis. Evidence from various taxa and diversity measures confirms the complex relationship between parasitism and biodiversity.
Growing evidence suggests that biodiversity mediates parasite prevalence. We have compiled the first global database on occurrences and prevalence of marine parasitism throughout the Phanerozoic and assess the relationship with biodiversity to test if there is support for amplification or dilution of parasitism at the macroevolutionary scale. Median prevalence values by era are 5% for the Paleozoic, 4% for the Mesozoic, and a significant increase to 10% for the Cenozoic. We calculated period-level shareholder quorum sub-sampled (SQS) estimates of mean sampled diversity, three-timer (3T) origination rates, and 3T extinction rates for the most abundant host clades in the Paleobiology Database to compare to both occurrences of parasitism and the more informative parasite prevalence values. Generalized linear models (GLMs) of parasite occurrences and SQS diversity measures support both the amplification (all taxa pooled, crinoids and blastoids, and molluscs) and dilution hypotheses (arthropods, cnidarians, and bivalves). GLMs of prevalence and SQS diversity measures support the amplification hypothesis (all taxa pooled and molluscs). Though likely scale-dependent, parasitism has increased through the Phanerozoic and clear patterns primarily support the amplification of parasitism with biodiversity in the history of life. This article is part of the theme issue 'Infectious disease macroecology: parasite diversity and dynamics across the globe'.

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