Abstract

Summary Many parasites infect multiple sympatric host species, and there is a general assumption that parasite transmission between co‐occurring host species is commonplace. Such between‐species transmission could be key to parasite persistence within a disease reservoir and is consequently an emerging focus for disease control.However, while a growing body of theory indicates the potential importance of between‐species transmission for parasite persistence, conclusive empirical evidence from natural communities is lacking, and the assumption that between‐species transmission is inevitable may therefore be wrong.We investigated the occurrence of between‐species transmission in a well‐studied multihost parasite system. We identified the flea‐borne Bartonella parasites infecting sympatric populations of Apodemus sylvaticus (wood mice) and Myodes glareolus (bank voles) in the UK and confirmed that several Bartonella species infect both rodent species. However, counter to previous knowledge, genetic characterization of these parasites revealed covert host specificity, where each host species is associated with a distinct assemblage of genetic variants, indicating that between‐species transmission is rare.Limited between‐species transmission could result from rare encounters between one host species and the parasites infecting another and/or host–parasite incompatibility. We investigated the occurrence of such encounter and compatibility barriers by identifying the flea species associated with each rodent host, and the Bartonella variants carried by individual fleas. We found that the majority of fleas were host‐generalists but the assemblage of Bartonella variants in fleas tended to reflect the assemblage of Bartonella variants in the host species they were collected from, thus providing evidence of encounter barriers mediated by limited between‐species flea transfer. However, we also found several fleas that were carrying variants never found in the host species from which they were collected, indicating some degree of host–pathogen incompatibility when barriers to encounter are overcome.Overall, these findings challenge our default perceptions of multihost parasite persistence, as they show that despite considerable overlaps in host species ecology, separate populations of the same parasite species may circulate and persist independently in different sympatric host species. This questions our fundamental understanding of endemic transmission dynamics and the control of infection within natural reservoir communities.

Highlights

  • Most parasites are able to infect multiple host species (Cleaveland, Laurenson & Taylor 2001; Woolhouse, Taylor & Haydon 2001), a realization that has fundamentally changed how we approach issues of disease control

  • While a growing body of theory indicates the potential importance of betweenspecies transmission for parasite persistence, conclusive empirical evidence from natural communities is lacking, and the assumption that between-species transmission is inevitable may be wrong

  • We identified the flea-borne Bartonella parasites infecting sympatric populations of Apodemus sylvaticus and Myodes glareolus in the UK and confirmed that several Bartonella species infect both rodent species

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Summary

Introduction

Most parasites are able to infect multiple host species (Cleaveland, Laurenson & Taylor 2001; Woolhouse, Taylor & Haydon 2001), a realization that has fundamentally changed how we approach issues of disease control. The occurrence of between-species transmission is often just assumed given that a parasite infects multiple sympatric host species (Dobson & Meagher 1996), or is concluded on the basis of indirect evidence such as correlations between parasite prevalence in one host species and population densities of another (Telfer et al 2007a) Such correlations may arise as a result of other processes not related to between-species transmission, and the general importance of between-species transmission in endemic parasite persistence in nature remains largely unknown

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