PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Patterns of avian haemosporidian infections vary with time, but not habitat, in a fragmented Neotropical landscape.

  • Juan Rivero de Aguilar,
  • Fernando Castillo,
  • Andrea Moreno,
  • Nicolás Peñafiel,
  • Luke Browne,
  • Scott T Walter,
  • Jordan Karubian,
  • Elisa Bonaccorso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206493
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. e0206493

Abstract

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Habitat loss has the potential to alter vertebrate host populations and their interactions with parasites. Theory predicts a decrease in parasite diversity due to the loss of hosts in such contexts. However, habitat loss could also increase parasite infections as a result of the arrival of new parasites or by decreasing host immune defenses. We investigated the effect of habitat loss and other habitat characteristics on avian haemosporidian infections in a community of birds within a fragmented landscape in northwest Ecuador. We estimated Plasmodium and Haemoproteus parasite infections in 504 individual birds belonging to 8 families and 18 species. We found differences in infection status among bird species, but no relationship between forest fragment characteristics and infection status was observed. We also found a temporal effect, with birds at the end of the five-month study (which ran from the end of the rainy season thru the dry season), being less infected by Plasmodium parasites than individuals sampled at the beginning. Moreover, we found a positive relationship between forest area and Culicoides abundance. Taken as a whole, these findings indicate little effect of fragment characteristics per se on infection, although additional sampling or higher infection rates would have offered more power to detect potential relationships.