Revealing the drivers of parasite diversity: territorial and biodiverse
hosts raise haemosporidian regional diversity worldwide
Abstract
Biodiversity varies across the world and is influenced by multiple
factors, such as environmental stability and past historical events
(e.g., Panama Isthmus). At same time, organisms with unique
life-histories (e.g., parasites) are subject to unique selection
pressures that structure their diversity patterns. Parasites represent
one the most successful life-strategies, impacting directly and
indirectly the ecosystem by cascading effects on host fitness and
survival. Here, I focused on a highly diverse, prevalent, and
cosmopolitan group of parasites (avian haemosporidians) to investigate
the main drivers of regional parasite diversity on a global scale. To do
so, I compiled data from four global datasets on (i) avian
haemosporidian (malaria and malaria-like) parasites, (ii) bird species
richness, (iii) avian functional traits, and (iv) climate data. Then,
using generalized mixed models, I evaluated potential drivers of
haemosporidian diversity. I found that haemosporidian diversity is
driven by both host regional diversity and functional traits, and by
environmental conditions. In other words, parasite diversity increased
with increasing host richness and higher numbers of resident and
territorial birds. Further, greater temperature seasonality was also
positively correlated with parasite diversity. Hence, regions harboring
the greatest resident/territorial avian diversity (e.g., neotropics)
and/or higher temperature seasonality (e.g., North America) generally
harbor the highest diversity of haemosporidian parasites. Overall, I
demonstrated that haemosporidian parasite diversity is intrinsically
associated with their hosts’ diversity and functional traits.