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Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Park, AW; Farrell, MJ; Schmidt, JP; Huang, S; Dallas, TA; Pappalardo, P; Drake, JM; Stephens, PR; Poulin, R; Nunn, CL; Davies, TJ
Published in: Proceedings. Biological sciences
March 2018

The distribution of parasites across mammalian hosts is complex and represents a differential ability or opportunity to infect different host species. Here, we take a macroecological approach to investigate factors influencing why some parasites show a tendency to infect species widely distributed in the host phylogeny (phylogenetic generalism) while others infect only closely related hosts. Using a database on over 1400 parasite species that have been documented to infect up to 69 terrestrial mammal host species, we characterize the phylogenetic generalism of parasites using standard effect sizes for three metrics: mean pairwise phylogenetic distance (PD), maximum PD and phylogenetic aggregation. We identify a trend towards phylogenetic specialism, though statistically host relatedness is most often equivalent to that expected from a random sample of host species. Bacteria and arthropod parasites are typically the most generalist, viruses and helminths exhibit intermediate generalism, and protozoa are on average the most specialist. While viruses and helminths have similar mean pairwise PD on average, the viruses exhibit higher variation as a group. Close-contact transmission is the transmission mode most associated with specialism. Most parasites exhibiting phylogenetic aggregation (associating with discrete groups of species dispersed across the host phylogeny) are helminths and viruses.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Proceedings. Biological sciences

DOI

EISSN

1471-2954

ISSN

0962-8452

Publication Date

March 2018

Volume

285

Issue

1874

Start / End Page

20172613

Related Subject Headings

  • Species Specificity
  • Phylogeny
  • Mammals
  • Host-Parasite Interactions
  • Host Specificity
  • Animals
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
  • 30 Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences
  • 11 Medical and Health Sciences
 

Citation

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MLA
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Park, A. W., Farrell, M. J., Schmidt, J. P., Huang, S., Dallas, T. A., Pappalardo, P., … Davies, T. J. (2018). Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites. Proceedings. Biological Sciences, 285(1874), 20172613. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.2613
Park, A. W., M. J. Farrell, J. P. Schmidt, S. Huang, T. A. Dallas, P. Pappalardo, J. M. Drake, et al. “Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites.Proceedings. Biological Sciences 285, no. 1874 (March 2018): 20172613. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.2613.
Park AW, Farrell MJ, Schmidt JP, Huang S, Dallas TA, Pappalardo P, et al. Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites. Proceedings Biological sciences. 2018 Mar;285(1874):20172613.
Park, A. W., et al. “Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites.Proceedings. Biological Sciences, vol. 285, no. 1874, Mar. 2018, p. 20172613. Epmc, doi:10.1098/rspb.2017.2613.
Park AW, Farrell MJ, Schmidt JP, Huang S, Dallas TA, Pappalardo P, Drake JM, Stephens PR, Poulin R, Nunn CL, Davies TJ. Characterizing the phylogenetic specialism-generalism spectrum of mammal parasites. Proceedings Biological sciences. 2018 Mar;285(1874):20172613.
Journal cover image

Published In

Proceedings. Biological sciences

DOI

EISSN

1471-2954

ISSN

0962-8452

Publication Date

March 2018

Volume

285

Issue

1874

Start / End Page

20172613

Related Subject Headings

  • Species Specificity
  • Phylogeny
  • Mammals
  • Host-Parasite Interactions
  • Host Specificity
  • Animals
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
  • 30 Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences
  • 11 Medical and Health Sciences