Parasite (Jan 2019)

Does host socio-spatial behavior lead to a fine-scale spatial genetic structure in its associated parasites?

  • Portanier Elodie,
  • Garel Mathieu,
  • Devillard Sébastien,
  • Duhayer Jeanne,
  • Poirel Marie-Thérèse,
  • Henri Hélène,
  • Régis Corinne,
  • Maillard Daniel,
  • Redman Elizabeth,
  • Itty Christian,
  • Michel Patricia,
  • Bourgoin Gilles

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2019062
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. 64

Abstract

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Gastro-intestinal nematodes, especially Haemonchus contortus, are widespread pathogenic parasites of small ruminants. Studying their spatial genetic structure is as important as studying host genetic structure to fully understand host-parasite interactions and transmission patterns. For parasites having a simple life cycle (e.g., monoxenous parasites), gene flow and spatial genetic structure are expected to strongly rely on the socio-spatial behavior of their hosts. Based on five microsatellite loci, we tested this hypothesis for H. contortus sampled in a wild Mediterranean mouflon population (Ovis gmelini musimon × Ovis sp.) in which species- and environment-related characteristics have been found to generate socio-spatial units. We nevertheless found that their parasites had no spatial genetic structure, suggesting that mouflon behavior was not enough to limit parasite dispersal in this study area and/or that other ecological and biological factors were involved in this process, for example other hosts, the parasite life cycle, or the study area history.

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