Background
Echinococcus multilocularis
(
Em
) is a parasite with a complex life cycle whose transmission involves a predator-prey interaction. Accidental ingestion of
Em
eggs by humans may cause alveolar echinococcosis, a potentially fatal disease. Although previous research suggested that the composition of the assemblage of prey species may play a key role in the transmission, the relation between
Em
presence and the prey assemblages has never been analyzed. Herein, we propose a community analysis approach, based on assemblage similarity statistics, clustering, non-metric dimensional scaling and GLM modelling to analyze the relationships between small mammal assemblages, environmental variables, and the prevalence of
Em
in intermediate and definitive hosts in an urban area.
Results
In our study areas within the City of Calgary, Alberta (Canada), we identified three main small mammal assemblages associated with different prevalence of
Em
, characterized by a different proportion of species known to be good intermediate hosts for
Em
. As expected, assemblages with higher proportion of species susceptible to
Em
were observed with higher prevalence of parasite, whereas the total abundance
per se
of small mammals was not a predictor of transmission likely due to dilution effect. Furthermore, these assemblages were also predicted by simple environmental proxies such as land cover and terrain.
Conclusions
Our results indicated that the use of a community analysis approach allows for robust characterization of these complex and multivariate relationships, and may offer a promising tool for further understanding of parasite epidemiology in complex multi-host systems. In addition, this analysis indicates that it is possible to predict potential foci of disease risk within urban areas using environmental data commonly available to city planners and land managers.
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