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Large-scale spatial drivers of avian schistosomes in Northern Michigan inland lakes

Authors :
Jason P. Sckrabulis
Madelyn L. Messner
Jenna Stanny
Ryan B. McWhinnie
Hamzah D. Ansari
Aleena M. Hajek
Alexander Bageris
Thomas R. Raffel
Source :
Parasitology, Vol 151, Pp 495-505 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2024.

Abstract

Avian schistosomes are snail-borne trematode parasites (Trichobilharzia spp.) that can cause a nasty skin rash in humans when their cercariae mistake us for their normal bird hosts. We sought to investigate drivers of the spatial distribution of Trichobilharzia cercaria abundance throughout Northern Michigan lakes. For 38 sites on 16 lakes, we assessed several dozen potential environmental predictors that we hypothesized might have direct or indirect effects on overall cercaria abundance, based on known relationships between abiotic and biotic factors in wetland ecosystems. We included variables quantifying local densities of intermediate hosts, temperature, periphyton growth rates, human land use and hydrology. We also measured daily abundance of schistosome cercariae in the water over a 5-week period, supported by community scientists who collected and preserved filtered water samples for qPCR. The strongest predictor of cercaria abundance was Lymnaea host snail density. Lymnaea density was higher in deeper lakes and at sites with more deciduous tree cover, consistent with their association with cool temperature habitats. Contrary to past studies of human schistosomes, we also found a significant negative relationship between cercaria abundance and submerged aquatic vegetation, possibly due to vegetation blocking cercaria movement from offshore snail beds. If future work shows that these effects are indeed causal, then these results suggest possible new approaches to managing swimmer's itch risk in northern MI lakes, such as modifying tree cover and shallow-water vegetation at local sites.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00311820 and 14698161
Volume :
151
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Parasitology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f2b50dbce11c490791a3b0fb003bccd7
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182024000337