Haemoproteus parasites and passerines: the effect of local generalists on inferences of host-parasite co-phylogeny in the British Isles

Woodrow, Charlie, Rosca, Adina T., Fletcher, Rachel M. , Hone, Abigail L., Ruta, Marcello, Hamer, Keith C. and Dunn, Jenny C. (2023) Haemoproteus parasites and passerines: the effect of local generalists on inferences of host-parasite co-phylogeny in the British Isles. Parasitology . ISSN 0031-1820

Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182023000628

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Haemoproteus parasites and passerines: the effect of local generalists on inferences of host-parasite co-phylogeny in the British Isles
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Abstract

Host-parasite associations provide a benchmark for investigating evolutionary arms races and antagonistic coevolution. However, the potential ecological mechanisms underlying such associations are difficult to unravel. In particular, local adaptations of hosts and/or parasites may hamper reliable inferences of host-parasite relationships and the specialist-generalist definitions of parasite lineages, making it problematic to understand such relationships on a global scale. Phylogenetic methods were used to investigate co-phylogenetic patterns between vector-borne parasites of the genus Haemoproteus and their passeriform hosts, to infer the ecological interactions of parasite and host that may have driven the evolution of both groups in a local geographic domain. As several Haemoproteus lineages were only detected once, and given the occurrence of a single extreme generalist, the effect of removing individual lineages on the co-phylogeny pattern was tested. When all lineages were included, and when all singly- detected lineages were removed, there was no convincing evidence for host-parasite co- phylogeny. However, when only the generalist lineage was removed, strong support for co- phylogeny was indicated, and ecological interactions could be successfully inferred. This study exemplifies the importance of identifying locally abundant lineages when sampling host- parasite systems, to provide reliable insights into the precise mechanisms underlying host- parasite interactions.

Keywords:mtDNA, disease, Haemoproteus, cospeciation, phylogenetics
Subjects:C Biological Sciences > C111 Parasitology
C Biological Sciences > C182 Evolution
Divisions:COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND SCIENCE > School of Life and Environmental Sciences > Department of Life Sciences
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ID Code:55577
Deposited On:15 Aug 2023 09:37

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