Protozoan infections are not associated with genetic diversity of avian
hosts: a meta-analysis
Abstract
Genetic diversity is vital for species’ adaptation to environmental
changes, including disease pressures. Parasites exert strong selective
forces, often linking reduced genetic diversity with increased infection
susceptibility. However, the impact of genetic diversity at both
functional and neutral loci on infection patterns in natural populations
remains unclear. This meta-analysis examines the relationship between
genetic diversity and protozoan infections across multiple avian
species, focusing on genetic marker type (functional vs. neutral),
parasite genus, and host migratory behaviour. Data from 29 studies
covering 24 bird species and 72 effect sizes—derived from a variety of
genetic markers and infection metrics (prevalence and intensity)—were
synthesized. Contrary to expectations, no significant relationship was
found between individual genetic diversity and infection prevalence or
intensity, regardless of marker type. Meta-regression analyses revealed
that neither parasite genus nor migratory behaviour altered the
association between genetic diversity and infection measures. Our
findings do not support the notion that host genetic diversity shapes
infection patterns within populations. However, broad genetic diversity
measures may obscure finer genetic effects from specific alleles (e.g.,
MHC variants), and reliance on parasite genetic material alone may
underrepresent infection status. Future studies should integrate broad
genetic diversity measures with allele-specific analyses and include
antibody testing to better assess infection history, offering a fuller
view of host-parasite co-evolution in natural ecosystems.