Host niche breadth differentially modulates the effects of anthropogenic disturbance across generalist and specialist parasites

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Host niche breadth differentially modulates the effects of anthropogenic disturbance across generalist and specialist parasites

Authors

Warudkar, A.; R, G.; Arvind, C.; Ishtiaq, F.; Dharmarajan, G.; Robin, V. V.

Abstract

Anthropogenic disturbances in natural habitats increase the risk of emerging infectious diseases in free-ranging host communities. Hence, understanding the processes driving such patterns is critical towards One Health. While anthropogenic disturbance is known to promote habitat-generalist host species through biotic homogenisation, generalist parasites (wider host breadth) also respond positively to the disturbed habitats. We hypothesise that generalist parasites are more likely to infect generalist hosts. We tested this hypothesis in a sky island system where generalist (Plasmodium) and specialist (Haemoproteus) haemosporidian parasites infect a range of bird hosts in disturbed and natural forest patches. We used a natural experiment framework to control for climatic differences (similar elevation) and habitat quality (same habitat type, but varying disturbance matrix). We collected 1106 samples from the field and examined the genus-level parasite prevalence and the host specificity of individual parasite lineages. Our results suggest that the generalist (Plasmodium) parasites are more prevalent in generalist birds, irrespective of disturbance. However, the specialist (Haemoproteus) parasites were more prevalent in specialist birds in natural forests than in disturbed forests. Among the individual parasite lineages, we found the host specificity to be associated with the degree of habitat specialisation of their host species. Our results provide evidence for the tendency of generalist parasites to infect generalist host species - a potential mechanism for a higher risk of emerging infectious diseases in human-dominated regions. We emphasise the role of host ecology in understanding the impact of anthropogenic disturbance on parasite prevalence in free-ranging host communities.

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