Haemosporidian infections are more common in breeding shorebirds than in migrating shorebirds

Author:

Jones William1ORCID,Tóth Zsófia1,Khursanov Viacheslav2,Kisliakova Nastassia2,Krüger Oliver3,Székely Tamás14,Karlionova Natalia2,Pinchuk Pavel5,Chakarov Nayden3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Zoology and Human Biology University of Debrecen Egyetém ter 1 Debrecen H‐4032 Hungary

2. Scientific and Practical Centre for Biological Resources National Academy of Sciences of Belarus Akademicheskaya 27 Minsk 220072 Belarus

3. Department of Animal Behaviour Bielefeld University PO Box 100131 Bielefeld D‐33501 Germany

4. Milner Centre for Evolution University of Bath Bath BA2 7AY UK

5. Pripyat National Park Lyaskovichi st. Sasha Glushko 7a Gomel 247946 Belarus

Abstract

Migrating animals are thought to be important spillover sources for novel pathogens. Haemosporidians (malaria‐related parasites) are one such group of pathogens that commonly spillover into novel host communities if competent vectors are present. In birds, shorebirds (sandpipers, plovers and allies) perform some of the longest avian migrations, yet they are traditionally perceived as relatively free from haemosporidians. Although low prevalence fits several theories, such as effective immune responses or low exposure to vectors, few studies have been carried out in freshwater inland sites, where the vectors of haemosporidians (e.g. mosquitoes) are abundant, with a mixture of actively migrating (staging) and breeding hosts. Here we report the prevalence of three haemosporidian parasites, Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon and Plasmodium, screened in 214 shorebirds from 15 species sampled in a freshwater marshland, southern Belarus. Contrary to most previous studies, we found that haemosporidians were frequent, with an overall prevalence in the community of 16.36%, including the locally breeding shorebirds (23.13%, 134 individuals of 10 species). However, actively migrating shorebirds had much lower prevalence (0.05%, 55 individuals of five species). We suggest that blood parasite infections are more common in shorebirds than currently acknowledged. Yet, actively migrating species may be free from haemosporidians or carry suppressed infections, leading to lower prevalence or even apparent absence in some species. Taken together, we theorize that a combination of sampling biases has driven our understanding of haemosporidian prevalence in shorebirds and future studies should take the migratory status of individuals into account when reporting prevalence. Furthermore, we argue that birds undergoing active migration may be less likely sources of spillover events than previously assumed.

Funder

Royal Society

Nemzeti Kutatási Fejlesztési és Innovációs Hivatal

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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