The Distribution and Diversity of Avian Malaria Parasites in Australian and Southern Melanesian Birds

View/ Open
Author(s)
Primary Supervisor
McCallum, Hamish
Clegg, Sonya
Other Supervisors
Adlard, Robert
Year published
2016
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Parasites can influence evolutionary patterns in their hosts by generating a mosaic of selection pressures across populations. Variations in parasite prevalence and host-specificity can determine how parasites are distributed among hosts and, ultimately, how parasite interactions influence host biogeography. However, our understanding of how host-parasite interactions influence biogeographic patterns is limited by a lack of appropriate model systems. Avian malaria parasites (Plasmodium and Haemoproteus; Haemosporida) are a diverse, globally distributed group of vector-borne blood parasites. Because avian malaria prevalence ...
View more >Parasites can influence evolutionary patterns in their hosts by generating a mosaic of selection pressures across populations. Variations in parasite prevalence and host-specificity can determine how parasites are distributed among hosts and, ultimately, how parasite interactions influence host biogeography. However, our understanding of how host-parasite interactions influence biogeographic patterns is limited by a lack of appropriate model systems. Avian malaria parasites (Plasmodium and Haemoproteus; Haemosporida) are a diverse, globally distributed group of vector-borne blood parasites. Because avian malaria prevalence and community composition can vary across host populations, these parasites have potential to impose spatially divergent selective pressures in birds. This thesis generates new perspectives on the evolutionary importance of avian malaria by exploring patterns in malaria prevalence, diversity and host-specificity in the under-studied South Pacific. Specifically, I sample wild birds for malaria to test whether (a) these parasites conform to classic global and island biogeography patterns, and (b) whether variation in parasite prevalence and host-specificity may influence the distributions and evolutionary trajectories of their avian hosts.
View less >
View more >Parasites can influence evolutionary patterns in their hosts by generating a mosaic of selection pressures across populations. Variations in parasite prevalence and host-specificity can determine how parasites are distributed among hosts and, ultimately, how parasite interactions influence host biogeography. However, our understanding of how host-parasite interactions influence biogeographic patterns is limited by a lack of appropriate model systems. Avian malaria parasites (Plasmodium and Haemoproteus; Haemosporida) are a diverse, globally distributed group of vector-borne blood parasites. Because avian malaria prevalence and community composition can vary across host populations, these parasites have potential to impose spatially divergent selective pressures in birds. This thesis generates new perspectives on the evolutionary importance of avian malaria by exploring patterns in malaria prevalence, diversity and host-specificity in the under-studied South Pacific. Specifically, I sample wild birds for malaria to test whether (a) these parasites conform to classic global and island biogeography patterns, and (b) whether variation in parasite prevalence and host-specificity may influence the distributions and evolutionary trajectories of their avian hosts.
View less >
Thesis Type
Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
Degree Program
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
School
Griffith School of Environment
Copyright Statement
The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
Item Access Status
Public
Subject
Melanesian birds
Avian malaria parasites
Plasmodium
Haemoproteus