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Springer, Journal of Ornithology, 4(153), p. 1253-1259, 2012

DOI: 10.1007/s10336-012-0860-0

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Local haemoparasites in introduced wetland passerines

Journal article published in 2012 by Rita Ventim, Luisa Mendes, Jaime A. Ramos ORCID, Helder Cardoso, Javier Perez-Tris
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

When colonizing a new area, introduced spe-cies may lose their original haemoparasites. If the local parasites are unable to infect the novel introduced hosts, these may gain a fitness advantage over their local com-petitors. Alternatively, the introduced species may be sus-ceptible to local parasites and enter the local transmission dynamics. We studied these two possibilities in commu-nities of wetland passerines infected with haemosporidians (genera Haemoproteus and Plasmodium) in Portugal, southwest Europe. Four introduced and six native (resident and breeding migrant) passerine species were tested for haemosporidians in four reed beds. Our results suggest that the introduced species have lost their original haemopara-sites upon colonization and entered the local transmission cycle. Two local Plasmodium lineages infected the exotic species: one of them (SGS1) was the most host generalist and prevalent lineage in the native species, so was expected to be present in the exotics at random. The other lineage (PADOM01) was rarer in the sampled community, but was present in native hosts that are phylogenetically close to the infected exotic species; therefore, the colonization of the exotic host by PADOM01 seems to be constrained by the parasite's specialization and by phylogenetic factors. When phylogeny was controlled for, there were no sig-nificant differences in infection prevalence and number of lineages between exotics and natives. Zusammenfassung Lokale Blutparasiten bei neu zugezogenen Sperlingsvö-geln in Feuchtgebieten