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Host community assembly modifies the relationship between host and parasite richness

Authors :
Charles E. Mitchell
Fletcher W. Halliday
Robert W. Heckman
Peter A. Wilfahrt
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Host and parasite richness are generally positively correlated, but the stability of this relationship during community assembly remains untested. The composition of host communities can alter parasite transmission, and the relationship between host and parasite richness is sensitive to parasite transmission. Thus, changes in composition during host community assembly could strengthen or weaken the relationship between host and parasite richness. Host community assembly, in turn, can be driven by many processes, including resource enrichment. To test the hypothesis that host community assembly can alter the relationship between host and parasite richness, we experimentally crossed host diversity and resource supply to hosts, then allowed communities to assemble. As previously shown, initial host diversity and resource supply determined the trajectory of host community assembly, altering post-assembly host species richness, richness-independent host phylogenetic diversity, and colonization by exotic host species. Throughout community assembly, host richness predicted parasite richness. As predicted, this effect was moderated by exotic abundance: communities dominated by exotic species exhibited a stronger positive relationship between post-assembly host and parasite richness. Ultimately, these results suggest that, by modulating parasite transmission, community assembly can modify the relationship between host and parasite richness, providing a novel mechanism to explain contingencies in this relationship.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8488ed86bb3510710700c25dc22cf32b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/857151