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doi: 10.5061/dryad.mf202
1. Ecologists increasingly report the structures of metacommunities for free-living species, yet far less is known about the composition of symbiont communities through space and time. Understanding the drivers of symbiont community patterns has implications ranging from emerging infectious disease to managing host microbiomes. 2. Using symbiont communities from amphibian hosts sampled from wetlands of California, USA, we quantified the effects of spatial, habitat filtering, and host community components on symbiont occupancy and overall metacommunity structure. 3. We built upon a statistical method to describe metacommunity structure that accounts for imperfect detection in survey data – detection error-corrected elements of metacommunity structure (DECEMS) – by adding an analysis to identify covariates of community turnover. We applied our model to a metacommunity of 8 parasite taxa observed in 3571 Pacific chorus frogs (Pseudacris regilla) surveyed from 174 wetlands over 5 years. 4. Symbiont metacommunity structure varied across years, showing nested structure in three years and random structure in two years. Species turnover was most consistently influenced by spatial and host community components. Occupancy generally increased in more southeastern wetlands, and snail (intermediate-host) community composition had strong effects on most symbiont taxa. 5. We have used sophisticated but accessible statistical methods to reveal that spatial components - which influence colonization - and host community composition - which mediates transmission - both drive symbiont community composition in this system. These methods allow us to associate broad patterns of community turnover to local, species-level effects, ultimately improving our understanding of spatial community dynamics.
Mihaljevic_etal_JAE_SMData and code for "Parasite metacommunities: Evaluating the roles of host community composition and environmental gradients in structuring symbiont communities within amphibians." A README file is included to explain each element of the .ZIP file.
trematodes, Bayesian inference, disease ecology, Disease ecology, Parasites, Trematodes, symbionts
trematodes, Bayesian inference, disease ecology, Disease ecology, Parasites, Trematodes, symbionts
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influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Average | |
impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Average |
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