Habitat modification and seasonality influence avian haemosporidian parasite distributions in southeastern Brazil

Habitat modification may change vertebrate and vector-borne disease distributions. However, natural forest regeneration through secondary succession may mitigate these effects. Here we tested the hypothesis that secondary succession influences the distribution of birds and their haemosporidian paras...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2017-06, Vol.12 (6), p.e0178791-e0178791
Hauptverfasser: Ferreira Junior, Francisco C, Rodrigues, Raquel A, Ellis, Vincenzo A, Leite, Lemuel O, Borges, Magno A Z, Braga, Érika M
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container_title PloS one
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creator Ferreira Junior, Francisco C
Rodrigues, Raquel A
Ellis, Vincenzo A
Leite, Lemuel O
Borges, Magno A Z
Braga, Érika M
description Habitat modification may change vertebrate and vector-borne disease distributions. However, natural forest regeneration through secondary succession may mitigate these effects. Here we tested the hypothesis that secondary succession influences the distribution of birds and their haemosporidian parasites (genera Plasmodium and Haemoproteus) in a seasonally dry tropical forest, a globally threatened ecosystem, in Brazil. Moreover, we assessed seasonal fluctuations in parasite prevalence and distribution. We sampled birds in four different successional stages at the peak and end of the rainy season, as well as in the middle and at the end of the dry season. A non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis revealed that bird communities in the pasture (i.e., highly modified) areas were different from those in the early, intermediate, and late successional areas (secondary forests). Among 461 individual birds, haemosporidian prevalence was higher in pasture areas than in the more advanced successional stages, but parasite communities were homogeneous across these areas. Parasite prevalence was higher in pasture-specialists birds (resilient species) than in forest-specialists species, suggesting that pasture-specialists may increase infection risk for co-occurring hosts. We found an increase in prevalence between the middle and end of the dry season, a period associated with the beginning of the breeding season (early spring) in southeastern Brazil. We also found effects of seasonality in the relative prevalence of specific parasite lineages. Our results show that natural forest recovery through secondary succession in SDTFs is associated with compositional differences in avian communities, and that advanced successional stages are associated with lower prevalence of avian haemosporidian parasites.
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subjects Analysis
Animals
Biodiversity
Biology and Life Sciences
Birds
Birds - parasitology
Brazil
Breeding
Breeding seasons
Communities
Culicidae
Diseases
Distribution
Dry season
Earth Sciences
Ecological succession
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Ecosystem
Ecosystems
Environmental aspects
Forest ecosystems
Forest regeneration
Forests
Habitat modification
Haemosporida - parasitology
Host-Parasite Interactions
Infections
Medicine and Health Sciences
Multidimensional scaling
Parasites
Pasture
Plasmodium
Protozoan diseases
Rainy season
Recovering
Regeneration
Scaling
Seasonal variations
Seasonal variations (Diseases)
Seasons
Succession
Tropical forests
Vector-borne diseases
title Habitat modification and seasonality influence avian haemosporidian parasite distributions in southeastern Brazil
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