Effects of the habitat on anuran blood parasites in the eastern brazilian amazon

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Abstract

Biological interactions play an important role in regulating and maintaining natural populations. Like most interactions, parasitism may be influenced by environmental conditions. Therefore, changes caused by human activity may drastically affect the equilibrium of the assemblages of parasitized organisms (hosts). Herein, we described the composition of hemoparasites of anurans from two distinct environments: Forest and oil palm plantations. We identified the most frequent groups of blood parasites, and whether infections differ between habitats (forest and plantation) and between microhabitats (arboreal or terrestrial). We collected 128 anurans, of which 46 (36%) were parasitized by hemoparasites. The genus Trypanosoma spp. was found in 30% (n = 37/128) of the infected anurans in both habitats, recorded mostly in terrestrial anurans in oil palm plantations. Apicomplexa hemoprotozoans were also found in 13% (n=17/128) of the anurans, which mainly were terrestrial species collected in oil palm plantations. There was no difference in parasitism between the two assemblies and between the studied microhabitats. This is the first study that has analyzed the ecological relationship between anurans as hosts and their blood parasites, in a region under intense anthropic pressure, in the Brazilian Amazon.

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Pinho, S. R. C., Rodriguez-Malaga, S., Lozano-Osorio, R., Correa, F. S., Silva, I. B., & Santos-Costa, M. C. (2021). Effects of the habitat on anuran blood parasites in the eastern brazilian amazon. Anais Da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias, 93. https://doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765202120201703

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