Population- and age-specific patterns of haemosporidian assemblages and infection levels in European bee-eaters (Merops apiaster)

[Display omitted] •Identifying factors that influence parasitism helps in understanding host–parasite systems.•Avian migrants may clearly differ in parasitism depending on migration behaviour.•We sampled parasites in bee-eaters differing in migration and colonisation patterns.•Haemosporidian assembl...

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Published inInternational journal for parasitology Vol. 50; no. 14; pp. 1125 - 1131
Main Authors Emmenegger, Tamara, Alves, José A., Rocha, Afonso D., Costa, Joana Santos, Schmid, Raffaella, Schulze, Martin, Hahn, Steffen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2020
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Identifying factors that influence parasitism helps in understanding host–parasite systems.•Avian migrants may clearly differ in parasitism depending on migration behaviour.•We sampled parasites in bee-eaters differing in migration and colonisation patterns.•Haemosporidian assemblages and prevalence distinctly differed between populations.•How habitat use and co-evolutionary backgrounds contribute to the patterns remains to be elucidated. Amongst other factors, host behaviour critically determines the patterns with which blood parasites occur in wild host populations. In particular, migratory hosts that sequentially occupy distant sites within and across years are expected to show distinct patterns of blood parasitism depending on their population-specific schedules and whereabouts. Here, we monitored haemosporidian parasitism in two populations of European bee-eaters (Merops apiaster), breeding in Portugal and Germany, with fundamentally different spatiotemporal migration patterns and colonisation histories. We describe and compare the composition of their parasite fauna as well as host population-, age- and sex-specific patterns in the frequency and intensity of infections. We found haemosporidian prevalence to be higher in Portugal compared with Germany and the prevalence generally increased with host age in both populations. Bee-eaters breeding in Portugal and wintering in western Africa mostly hosted parasites of the genus Haemoproteus, while Plasmodium lineages prevailed in birds breeding in Germany and wintering in central Africa. We found 18 genetic lineages, of which nine uniquely occurred in Germany, three uniquely in Portugal and six occurred in both breeding populations. The infection intensities (= % infected per inspected erythrocytes) ranged from 0.002% up to maximally 2.5% in Portugal and 9.6% in Germany. The intensity was higher in Germany compared with Portugal, vastly varied between the parasite genera (Haemoproteus > Plasmodium), but also differed between lineages of the same genus. Our results suggest that populations from different parts of a host’s breeding range differ in prevalence and the composition of their haemosporidian assemblages, rather than in the intensity of their infections. Whether these patterns are mainly caused by differential habitat use throughout the annual cycle and/or the population-specific co-evolutionary backgrounds of a host species in range expansion remains to be elucidated.
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ISSN:0020-7519
1879-0135
DOI:10.1016/j.ijpara.2020.07.005