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Divergent water requirements partition exposure risk to parasites in wild equids
Authors:Kaia J Tombak  Laurel A Easterling  Lindsay Martinez  Monica S Seng  Liana F Wait  Daniel I Rubenstein
Institution:1. Department of Anthropology, Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York New York, USA ; 2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton New Jersey, USA ; 3. School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Pennsylvania, USA ; 4. The Wildlife Society, Bethesda Maryland, USA ; 5. Nomad Health, New York New York, USA
Abstract:For grazing herbivores, dung density in feeding areas is an important determinant of exposure risk to fecal‐orally transmitted parasites. When host species share the same parasite species, a nonrandom distribution of their cumulative dung density and/or nonrandom ranging and feeding behavior may skew exposure risk and the relative selection pressure parasites impose on each host. The arid‐adapted Grevy''s zebra (Equus grevyi) can range more widely than the water‐dependent plains zebra (Equus quagga), with which it shares the same species of gastrointestinal nematodes. We studied how the spatial distribution of zebra dung relates to ranging and feeding behavior to assess parasite exposure risk in Grevy''s and plains zebras at a site inhabited by both zebra species. We found that zebra dung density declined with distance from water, Grevy''s zebra home ranges (excluding those of territorial males) were farther from water than those of plains zebras, and plains zebra grazing areas had higher dung density than random points while Grevy''s zebra grazing areas did not, suggesting a greater exposure risk in plains zebras associated with their water dependence. Fecal egg counts increased with home range proximity to water for both species, but the response was stronger in plains zebras, indicating that this host species may be particularly vulnerable to the elevated exposure risk close to water. We further ran experiments on microclimatic effects on dung infectivity and showed that fewer nematode eggs embryonated in dung in the sun than in the shade. However, only 5% of the zebra dung on the landscape was in shade, indicating that the microclimatic effects of shade on the density of infective larvae is not a major influence on exposure risk dynamics. Ranging constraints based on water requirements appear to be key mediators of nematode parasite exposure in free‐ranging equids.
Keywords:equid parasitology  fecal egg counts  gastrointestinal nematodes  helminth transmission risk  Parasite exposure risk  zebra habitat use
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