Aggregation and negative interactions in low-diversity and unsaturated monogenean (Platyhelminthes) communities in Astyanax aeneus (Teleostei) populations in a neotropical river of Mexico

Salgado Maldonado, Guillermo y Mendoza Franco, Edgar F. y Caspeta Mandujano, Juan Manuel y Ramírez Martínez, Carlos (2019) Aggregation and negative interactions in low-diversity and unsaturated monogenean (Platyhelminthes) communities in Astyanax aeneus (Teleostei) populations in a neotropical river of Mexico. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife, 8. pp. 203-215. ISSN 2213-2244

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Resumen

We studied monogenean communities of 11 populations of Astyanax aeneus (Günther) separated by small geographical distances along 60 km of the Lacantún river in Chiapas, Mexico, in February and August 2012. We found 12 monogenean taxa. Amongst these, five species specialist for Astyanax were widely distributed regionally, constituting 90% of the total collected monogeneans, with one of these species dominating most component communities. The high similarities in terms of composition between the component communities (SJaccard > 60%) as well as in terms of the abundance and composition between infracommunities (SBray Curtis > 40%), provide empirical evidence that transmission, both between hosts at the same location and between component communities, is high and effective. No resemblance pattern was detected between locations in terms of their spatial distribution. The composition of these communities was spatially and temporally consistent over the two very different weather periods sampled. These communities were not saturated. Our analysis suggests that the potential richness of the infracommunities is proportional to the number of monogenean species available in the component community. We found aggregation in the populations and between monogenean species. Intraspecific aggregation is density dependent, suggesting that intraspecific competition for space is not a limiting factor for the development of the population. We evaluated the associations for each species pair and detected 77% negative interactions (134/177 associations), suggesting that interspecific competition plays an important role in shaping these communities. The negative correlations of abundance between pairs of species contributes to confirmation of competition. Intraspecific aggregation increased relative to interspecific aggregation with richness in the component community, facilitating coexistence of the species. Our results suggest that these are interactive communities, where monogeneans disperse efficiently from a common source, colonize patches (hosts) together, and compete with other species even at low population densities. Finally, the coexistence of these species is favored by the unpredictable recruitment and aggregated use of fragmented resources.

Tipo de elemento: Article
Palabras claves no controlados: Metacommunity, Transmission, Species richness, Saturation, Competition
Materias: Q Ciencia > QL Zoología
Divisiones: Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia
Usuario depositante: Editor Repositorio
Creadores:
CreadorEmailORCID
Salgado Maldonado, GuillermoNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Mendoza Franco, Edgar F.NO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Caspeta Mandujano, Juan ManuelNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Ramírez Martínez, CarlosNO ESPECIFICADONO ESPECIFICADO
Fecha del depósito: 19 Nov 2020 17:02
Última modificación: 19 Nov 2020 17:02
URI: http://eprints.uanl.mx/id/eprint/20228

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