Author:
KRASNOV B. R.,SHENBROT G. I.,MEDVEDEV S. G.,VATSCHENOK V. S.,KHOKHLOVA I. S.
Abstract
We studied flea assemblages on rodents in different habitats of
the Ramon erosion cirque in the Negev Desert to examine
whether host–habitat relations influence flea spatial distribution.
Eleven flea
species parasitizing 12 rodent species were
recorded. There was significant positive relationship between flea species
richness
and body mass of the host species; no
relationships were found between relative richness of flea assemblage and
either the number of habitats occupied by the
host species or the size of host geographical range. The differences in
pattern of flea parasitism among habitat types within
host species were determined by both environmental features of a habitat
and the specific pattern of habitat use by rodents.
There was replacement of Xenopsylla conformis by Xenopsylla
ramesis on
Meriones crassus and Gerbillus dasyurus among
different habitats. The results of ordination of the flea collections from
each individual host demonstrated that the flea
assemblages were segregated mainly along 4 axes, which explained 86% of
total variance. Each of the ordination axes
corresponded with a change in flea species composition. The directions
of
these changes were (1) among-hosts within a
habitat and (2) among-habitats within a host.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
165 articles.
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