Publication | Open Access
Parasite loads are higher in the tropics: temperate to tropical variation in a single host‐parasite system
49
Citations
35
References
2008
Year
Parasite InteractionsMalariaBlood Parasite AbundanceHost SpecificityParasitologyHost-parasite RelationshipBiodiversityVector-parasite RelationshipDisease EcologySingle Host‐parasite SystemTropical VariationDisease DynamicsBiologyParasite AbundanceParasite LoadParasite LoadsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyParasite ControlMedicine
Parasites are important selective forces upon the evolutionary ecology of their hosts. At least one hypothesis suggests that high species diversity in the tropics is associated with higher parasite abundance in tropical climates. Few studies, however, have directly assessed whether parasite abundance is higher in the tropics. To address this question, it is ideal, although seldom achievable, to compare parasite abundance in a single species that occurs over a geographical area including both temperate and tropical regions. We examined variation in blood parasite abundance in seven populations of a single lizard host species ( Eulamprus quoyii ) using a transect that spans temperate and tropical climates. Parasite prevalence (proportion of the host population infected) showed no geographical pattern. Interestingly though, parasite load was higher in lizard populations in the tropics, and was related to mean annual temperature, but not to rainfall. We speculate that in this system the relationship between latitude and parasite load is most likely due to variation in host life history over their geographic range.
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