Abstract

BackgroundHost specificity is a fundamental determinant of tick population and pathogen transmission dynamics, and therefore has important implications for human health. Tick host specificity is expected to be particularly high in the tropics, where communities of ticks, hosts and pathogens are most diverse. Yet the degree to which tropical tick species are host-specific remains poorly understood. Combining new field data with published records, we assessed the specificity of tick-host associations in Panama, a diverse Neotropical region.MethodsThe resulting dataset includes 5,298 adult ticks belonging to 41 species of eight genera that were directly collected from 68 vertebrate host species of 17 orders. We considered three important aspects of tick host specificity: (i) the relative ecological importance of each host species (structural specificity); (ii) relatedness among host species (phylogenetic specificity); and (iii) spatial scale-dependence of tick-host relationships (geographical specificity). Applying quantitative network analyses and phylogenetic tools with null model comparisons, we assessed the structural and phylogenetic specificity across three spatial scales, ranging from central Panama to countrywide. Further, we tested whether species-rich tick genera parasitized a wider variety of hosts than species-poor genera, as expected when ticks specialize on different host species.ResultsMost tick species showed high structural and/or phylogenetic specificity in the adult stage. However, after correcting for sampling effort, we found little support for geographical specificity. Across the three scales, adult ticks tended to be specific to a limited number of host species that were phylogenetically closely related. These host species in turn, were parasitized by tick species from distinct genera, suggesting switching among distantly related hosts is common at evolutionary timescales. Further, there was a strong positive relationship between the taxonomic richness of the tick genera and that of their hosts, consistent with distinct tick species being relatively specific to different host species.ConclusionsOur results indicate that in the adult stage, most ticks in the diverse Neotropical community studied are host specialists. This contrasts with earlier assessments, but agrees with findings from other host-parasite systems. High host specificity in adult ticks implies high susceptibility to local tick-host co-extirpation, limited ability to colonize new habitats and limited potential for interspecific pathogen transmission.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13071-016-1655-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Host specificity is a fundamental determinant of tick population and pathogen transmission dynamics, and has important implications for human health

  • Several features of ticks are predicted to limit their host ranges and select for host specificity and host specificity is expected to be high for tropical tick species

  • We investigate the degree to which adult ticks are host-specific in Panama, a diverse Neotropical region supporting over 40 species of ticks

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Summary

Introduction

Host specificity is a fundamental determinant of tick population and pathogen transmission dynamics, and has important implications for human health. Tick host specificity is expected to be high in the tropics, where communities of ticks, hosts and pathogens are most diverse. The degree to which parasites are host-specific is a key determinant of their ability to colonize new host species [3], their geographical range size and local abundance [4, 5], the probability of parasite-host coextinction [6, 7] and the potential routes by which pathogens can be transmitted across vertebrate host taxa, including humans [8]. Ticks are obligatory hematophagous ectoparasites that feed on every class of terrestrial vertebrates throughout the world [11] They are major vectors of diseases to both humans and livestock, imposing a significant burden on public health and livestock producers [12]. Several features of ticks are predicted to limit their host ranges and select for host specificity (see [1, 8, 20] for a review) and host specificity is expected to be high for tropical tick species

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