Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Bordes F., Morand S., Pilosof S., Claude J., Krasnov B. R., Cosson J. F., Chaval Y., Ribas A., Chaisiri K., Blasdell K., Herbreteau Vincent, Dupuy S., Tran A. (2015). Habitat fragmentation alters the properties of a host-parasite network : rodents and their helminths in South-East Asia. Journal of Animal Ecology, 84 (5), p. 1253-1263. ISSN 0021-8790.

Titre du document
Habitat fragmentation alters the properties of a host-parasite network : rodents and their helminths in South-East Asia
Année de publication
2015
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000360093400012
Auteurs
Bordes F., Morand S., Pilosof S., Claude J., Krasnov B. R., Cosson J. F., Chaval Y., Ribas A., Chaisiri K., Blasdell K., Herbreteau Vincent, Dupuy S., Tran A.
Source
Journal of Animal Ecology, 2015, 84 (5), p. 1253-1263 ISSN 0021-8790
While the effects of deforestation and habitat fragmentation on parasite prevalence or richness are well investigated, host-parasite networks are still understudied despite their importance in understanding the mechanisms of these major disturbances. Because fragmentation may negatively impact species occupancy, abundance and co-occurrence, we predict a link between spatiotemporal changes in habitat and the architecture of host-parasite networks. For this, we used an extensive data set on 16 rodent species and 29 helminth species from seven localities of South-East Asia. We analysed the effects of rapid deforestation on connectance and modularity of helminth-parasite networks. We estimated both the degree of fragmentation and the rate of deforestation through the development of land uses and their changes through the last 20 to 30years in order to take into account the dynamics of habitat fragmentation in our statistical analyses. We found that rapid fragmentation does not affect helminth species richness per se but impacts host-parasite interactions as the rodent-helminth network becomes less connected and more modular. Our results suggest that parasite sharing among host species may become more difficult to maintain with the increase of habitat disturbance.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052] ; Sciences du monde animal [080]
Description Géographique
ASIE DU SUD EST ; THAILANDE ; LAOS ; CAMBODGE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010064927]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010064927
Contact