1. Age, but not sex and seasonality, influence Haemosporida prevalence in White-banded Tanagers ( Neothraupis fasciata) from central Brazil.
- Author
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Fecchio, A., Lima, M.R., Silveira, P., Ribas, A.C.A., Caparroz, R., and Marini, M.Â.
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HAEMOSPORIDA , *TANAGERS , *BLOOD parasites , *PLASMODIUM , *BIRD parasites , *BIRDS ,BIRD infections - Abstract
Despite many studies on avian blood parasites, we still have a limited understanding of the mechanisms that drive patterns of haemosporidian infection among tropical birds, including effects associated with sex, age, and seasonality. Using molecular and morphological methods for blood-parasite detection, we found that juvenile White-banded Tanagers ( Neothraupis fasciata (Lichtenstein, 1823)) had lower haemosporidian prevalence than adults in a population within central Brazil. However, no sex or seasonal differences were detected. Of the 92 White-banded Tanagers analyzed, 67 individuals (72.8% prevalence) were infected with either Haemoproteus or Plasmodium (phylum Sporozoa, class Coccidea, order Haemosporida). Sequencing of a portion of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene revealed six haemosporidian lineages: two lineages within the genus Haemoproteus and four within the genus Plasmodium. The prevalences of Plasmodium and Haemoproteus parasites were 43.5% and 17.4%, respectively. Our results suggest that this species maintains chronic infections all year round and individuals are able to sustain high parasite pressure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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