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Metabarcoding of eukaryotic parasite communities describes diverse parasite assemblages spanning the primate phylogeny
Author(s) -
Gogarten Jan F.,
CalvignacSpencer Sébastien,
Nunn Charles L.,
Ulrich Markus,
Saiepour Nasrin,
Nielsen Henrik Vedel,
Deschner Tobias,
Fichtel Claudia,
Kappeler Peter M.,
Knauf Sascha,
MüllerKlein Nadine,
Ostner Julia,
Robbins Martha M.,
Sangmaneedet Somboon,
Schülke Oliver,
Surbeck Martin,
Wittig Roman M.,
Sliwa Alexander,
Strube Christina,
Leendertz Fabian H.,
Roos Christian,
Noll Angela
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular ecology resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.96
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1755-0998
pISSN - 1755-098X
DOI - 10.1111/1755-0998.13101
Subject(s) - biology , parasite hosting , host (biology) , phylogenetic tree , phylogenetics , evolutionary biology , ecology , range (aeronautics) , parasitism , zoology , genetics , materials science , world wide web , gene , computer science , composite material
Despite their ubiquity, in most cases little is known about the impact of eukaryotic parasites on their mammalian hosts. Comparative approaches provide a powerful method to investigate the impact of parasites on host ecology and evolution, though two issues are critical for such efforts: controlling for variation in methods of identifying parasites and incorporating heterogeneity in sampling effort across host species. To address these issues, there is a need for standardized methods to catalogue eukaryotic parasite diversity across broad phylogenetic host ranges. We demonstrate the feasibility of a metabarcoding approach for describing parasite communities by analysing faecal samples from 11 nonhuman primate species representing divergent lineages of the primate phylogeny and the full range of sampling effort (i.e. from no parasites reported in the literature to the best‐studied primates). We detected a number of parasite families and regardless of prior sampling effort, metabarcoding of only ten faecal samples identified parasite families previously undescribed in each host (x̅ = 8.5 new families per species). We found more overlap between parasite families detected with metabarcoding and published literature when more research effort—measured as the number of publications—had been conducted on the host species' parasites. More closely related primates and those from the same continent had more similar parasite communities, highlighting the biological relevance of sampling even a small number of hosts. Collectively, results demonstrate that metabarcoding methods are sensitive and powerful enough to standardize studies of eukaryotic parasite communities across host species, providing essential new tools for macroecological studies of parasitism.

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