Host ecology and biogeography drive parasite community composition in Atlantic killifishes
Understanding the mechanisms of parasite community assembly can be confounded by phylogenetic distance among host species. Addressing this requires focusing on parasite communities within closely related taxa. Thus, we took a macroecological approach to examining parasite community structure within...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oecologia 2024-02, Vol.204 (2), p.289-300 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the mechanisms of parasite community assembly can be confounded by phylogenetic distance among host species. Addressing this requires focusing on parasite communities within closely related taxa. Thus, we took a macroecological approach to examining parasite community structure within Killifish species in the genus
Fundulus
to disentangle the effects of host phylogeny and ecological variables. We constructed a database of parasite communities within
Fundulus
species from 15 published and unpublished surveys covering the Atlantic coast of the US and Canada. The database was expanded by sampling sites in underrepresented provinces and states, totaling 10
Fundulus
species from 57 unique geographic sites. Univariate analysis of observed parasite species richness among
Fundulus
populations in the dataset found that latitude, climate type, and salinity were the dominant factors determining parasite species richness. Multivariate analysis found that host species and landscape type were the most important factors in determining the similarity of parasite assemblages. Unexpectedly, parasite species richness decreased in low latitudes, and host phylogenetic distance was not found to be a significant factor in the similarity of parasite communities. These results indicate that commonly reported large-scale drivers of parasite community structure, such as latitude and phylogeny, could have diminished significance at the host genus level relative to host ecology, biogeography, and local landscape factors. |
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ISSN: | 0029-8549 1432-1939 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00442-023-05420-y |