Host snail species exhibit differential Angiostrongylus cantonensis prevalence and infection intensity across an environmental gradient
•Rat lungworm infection prevalence and intensity vary among 16 snail species in Hawaii•Prevalence generally varies positively along a landscape moisture gradient•The magnitude of the prevalence response to moisture differs among species•The infection intensity response to moisture increases similarl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta tropica 2021-04, Vol.216, p.105824, Article 105824 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Rat lungworm infection prevalence and intensity vary among 16 snail species in Hawaii•Prevalence generally varies positively along a landscape moisture gradient•The magnitude of the prevalence response to moisture differs among species•The infection intensity response to moisture increases similarly among species•Snail capacity to transmit rat lungworm depends on the environment and host species
Diverse snail species serve as intermediate hosts of the parasitic nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis, the etiological agent of human neuroangiostrongyliasis. However, levels of A. cantonensis infection prevalence and intensity vary dramatically among these host species. Factors contributing to this variation are largely unknown. Environmental factors, such as precipitation and temperature, have been correlated with overall A. cantonensis infection levels in a locale, but the influence of environment on infection in individual snail species has not been addressed. We identified levels of A. cantonensis prevalence and intensity in 16 species of snails collected from 29 sites along an environmental gradient on the island of Oahu, Hawaii. The relationship between infection levels of individual species and their environment was evaluated using AIC model selection of Generalized Linear Mixed Models incorporating precipitation, temperature, and vegetation cover at each collection site. Our results indicate that different mechanisms drive parasite prevalence and intensity in the intermediate hosts. Overall, snails from rainy, cool, green sites had higher infection levels than snails from dry, hot sites with less green vegetation. Intensity increased at the same rate along the environmental gradient in all species, though at different levels, while the relation between prevalence and environmental variables depended on species. These results have implications for zoonotic transmission, as human infection is a function of infection in the intermediate hosts, ingestion of which is the main pathway of transmission. The probability of human infection is greater in locations with higher rainfall, lower temperature and more vegetation cover because of higher infection prevalence in the gastropod hosts, but this depends on the host species. Moreover, severity of neuroangiostrongyliasis symptoms is likely to be greater in locations with higher rainfall, lower temperature, and more vegetation because of the higher numbers of infectious larvae (infection intensity) in all infecte |
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ISSN: | 0001-706X 1873-6254 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.actatropica.2021.105824 |