The fast-food effect: costs of being a generalist in a human-dominated landscape

Author:

Guerrero-Sanchez Sergio12,Frias Liesbeth34,Saimin Silvester5,Orozco-terWengel Pablo2,Goossens Benoit256

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Applied One Health Research and Policy Advice, Jockey Club College of Veterinary Medicine and Life Sciences , City University of Hong Kong. To Yuen Building. 31 To Yuen Street, Kowloon, HK

2. Cardiff University Organisms and Environment Division, School of Biosciences, , Sir Martin Evans Building, Museum Avenue, Cardiff CF10 3AX, UK

3. Programme in Emerging Infectious Diseases Duke-NUS Medical School, . No. 8 College Road, Singapore 169857

4. Nanyang Technological University Asian School of the Environment, , 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore 639798

5. Wisma Muis Sabah Wildlife Department, 5th Floor, Block B, , Jalan Access Bomba Negeri, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, 88100 Malaysia

6. Danau Girang Field Centre, c/o Sabah Wildlife Department , 5th Floor, Block B, Wisma Muis, Jalan Access Bomba Negeri, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, 88100 Malaysia

Abstract

Abstract Agricultural expansion in Southeast Asia has converted most natural landscapes into mosaics of forest interspersed with plantations, dominated by the presence of generalist species that benefit from resource predictability. Dietary shifts, however, can result in metabolic alterations and the exposure of new parasites that can impact animal fitness and population survival. Our study focuses on the Asian water monitor lizard (Varanus salvator), one of the largest predators in the Asian wetlands, as a model species to understand the health consequences of living in a human-dominated landscape in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. We evaluated the effects of dietary diversity on the metabolism of monitor lizards and the impact on the composition of their parasite communities in an oil palm-dominated landscape. Our results showed that (1) rodent-dominated diets were associated with high levels of lipids, proteins and electrolytes, akin to a fast-food-based diet of little representativeness of the full nutritional requirements, but highly available, and (2) lizards feeding on diverse diets hosted more diverse parasite communities, however, at overall lower parasite prevalence. Furthermore, we observed that the effect of diet on lipid concentration differed depending on the size of individual home ranges, suggesting that sedentarism plays an important role in the accumulation of cholesterol and triglycerides. Parasite communities were also affected by a homogeneous dietary behaviour, as well as by habitat type. Dietary diversity had a negative effect on both parasite richness and prevalence in plantations, but not in forested areas. Our study indicates that human-dominated landscapes can pose a negative effect on generalist species and hints to the unforeseen health consequences for more vulnerable taxa using the same landscapes. Thus, it highlights the potential role of such a widely distributed generalist as model species to monitor physiological effects in the ecosystem in an oil palm-dominated landscape.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecological Modeling,Physiology

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