Global phylogeographic limits of Hawaii's avian malaria

Author:

Beadell Jon S12,Ishtiaq Farah1,Covas Rita3,Melo Martim3,Warren Ben H4,Atkinson Carter T5,Bensch Staffan6,Graves Gary R7,Jhala Yadvendradev V8,Peirce Mike A9,Rahmani Asad R10,Fonseca Dina M11,Fleischer Robert C1

Affiliation:

1. Genetics Program, National Zoological Park and National Museum of Natural HistoryWashington, DC 20008, USA

2. Department of Biology, University of MarylandCollege Park, MD 20742, USA

3. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of EdinburghEdinburgh EH9 3JT, UK

4. School of Plant Sciences, University of ReadingReading, Berkshire RG6 6AS, UK

5. US Geological Survey—Biological Resources Discipline, Pacific Island Ecosystems Research CenterHawaii National Park, HI 96718, USA

6. Department of Animal Ecology, Lund UniversitySölvegatan 37, 22362 Lund, Sweden

7. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian InstitutionWashington, DC 20560, USA

8. Wildlife Institute of India, ChandrabaniDehra Dun 248 001, India

9. MP International Consultancy, Normandale, Bexhill-on-SeaEast Sussex TN39 3NZ, UK

10. Bombay Natural History SocietyMumbai 400 023, India

11. Academy of Natural SciencesPhiladelphia, PA 19103, USA

Abstract

The introduction of avian malaria ( Plasmodium relictum ) to Hawaii has provided a model system for studying the influence of exotic disease on naive host populations. Little is known, however, about the origin or the genetic variation of Hawaii's malaria and traditional classification methods have confounded attempts to place the parasite within a global ecological and evolutionary context. Using fragments of the parasite mitochondrial gene cytochrome b and the nuclear gene dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase obtained from a global survey of greater than 13 000 avian samples, we show that Hawaii's avian malaria, which can cause high mortality and is a major limiting factor for many species of native passerines, represents just one of the numerous lineages composing the morphological parasite species. The single parasite lineage detected in Hawaii exhibits a broad host distribution worldwide and is dominant on several other remote oceanic islands, including Bermuda and Moorea, French Polynesia. The rarity of this lineage in the continental New World and the restriction of closely related lineages to the Old World suggest limitations to the transmission of reproductively isolated parasite groups within the morphological species.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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