6533b854fe1ef96bd12ae9b1
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The helminth community of the wood mouse Apodemus sylvaticus in a Mediterranean ecosystem in regeneration ten years after a wildfire.
M.t. Galán-puchadesMàrius V. FuentesSandra Sáez-duránSandra Sainz-elipesubject
MaleEcologySpecies diversityGeneral MedicinePopulation biologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationFiresHost-Parasite InteractionsRodent DiseasesWood mouseSpainHelminthsApodemusHelminthsAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyEcosystemFemaleSpecies richnessMurinaeEcosystemBalance of naturedescription
AbstractThis study was carried out 10 years after a wildfire in the Spanish Serra Calderona Natural Park, following a previous analysis comprising the first 5 years after the fire. Its primary aim was to elucidate the impact of this perturbation on the population biology of the wood mouseApodemus sylvaticus, and the repercussions on its helminth community in this regenerating Mediterranean ecosystem. Second, confirmation of the ability of the parasites to tolerate environmental stressors and the effects on their transmission strategies was sought. Five hundred and sixty-four individuals ofA. sylvaticuswere studied in a 9-year period, from the second to the tenth post-fire year: 408 mice from the burned area and 156 from the control – non-burned – area. The helminth community for both areas and the effect of intrinsic (host age and sex) and extrinsic (site, period and year of capture) factors on helminth prevalence, abundance and diversity, and species richness were analysed. Our findings show that, after an environmental disaster, the behaviour of helminth species might be related to their pre-catastrophe presence, their biological cycles, the host's immunological condition, the change of host dynamics, the direct effects of the perturbation, and the processes related to the re-establishment of the ecological balance of a devastated ecosystem.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-07-07 | Journal of helminthology |