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The role of species ecology in predicting Toxoplasma gondii prevalence in wild and domesticated mammals globally

PLoS Pathogens 2024 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jennifer F. Provencher Amy Wilson, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Scott Wilson, Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, Scott Wilson, David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher David R. Lapen, David R. Lapen, Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher Jennifer F. Provencher

Summary

This large-scale study analyzed Toxoplasma gondii infection rates across 533 wild mammal species worldwide, finding that infection risk increases with body size, lifespan, and meat-eating behavior. While not about microplastics, the research methods for tracking how environmental pathogens move through ecosystems are relevant, since microplastics can transport parasites and pathogens through similar ecological pathways. Understanding these infection routes helps explain how environmental contamination, including from microplastics, can affect wildlife and ultimately human health.

Models
Study Type Environmental

Macroecological approaches can provide valuable insight into the epidemiology of globally distributed, multi-host pathogens. Toxoplasma gondii is a protozoan that infects any warm-blooded animal, including humans, in almost every habitat worldwide. Toxoplasma gondii infects its hosts through oocysts in the environment, carnivory of tissue cysts within intermediate host prey and vertical transmission. These routes of infection enable specific predictions regarding the ecological and life history traits that should predispose specific taxa to higher exposure and, thus infection rates of T. gondii. Using T. gondii prevalence data compiled from 485 studies representing 533 free-ranging wild mammalian species, we examined how ecological (habitat type, trophic level) and life history (longevity, vagility, gestation duration and torpor) traits influence T. gondii infection globally. We also compared T. gondii prevalence between wild and domesticated species from the same taxonomic families using data compiled from 540 studies of domestic cattle, sheep, and pigs. Across free-ranging wildlife, we found the average T. gondii prevalence was 22%, which is comparable to the global human estimate. Among ecological guilds, terrestrial species had lower T. gondii prevalence than aquatic species, with freshwater aquatic taxa having an increased prevalence compared to marine aquatic species. Dietary niches were also influential, with carnivores having an increased risk compared to other trophic feeding groups that have reduced tissue cyst exposure in their diet. With respect to influential life history traits, we found that more vagile wildlife species had higher T. gondii infection rates, perhaps because of the higher cumulative risk of infection during movement through areas with varying T. gondii environmental loads. Domestic farmed species had a higher T. gondii prevalence compared to free-ranging confamilial wildlife species. Through a macroecological approach, we determined the relative significance of transmission routes of a generalist pathogen, demonstrating an increased infection risk for aquatic and carnivorous species and highlighting the importance of preventing pathogen pollution into aquatic environments. Toxoplasma gondii is increasingly understood to be primarily an anthropogenically-associated pathogen whose dissemination is enhanced by ecosystem degradation and human subsidisation of free-roaming domestic cats. Adopting an ecosystem restoration approach to reduce one of the world's most common parasites would synergistically contribute to other initiatives in conservation, feline and wildlife welfare, climate change, food security and public health.

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