Living on the edge: parasite prevalence changes dramatically across a range edge in an invasive gecko

  • Coates, Andrew
  • Barnett, Louise K.
  • Hoskin, Conrad
  • Phillips, Ben L.
Publication date
January 2017
Publisher
University of Chicago Press

Abstract

Species interactions can determine range limits, and parasitism is the most intimate of such interactions. Intriguingly, the very conditions on range edges likely change host-parasite dynamics in nontrivial ways. Range edges are often associated with clines in host density and with environmental transitions, both of which may affect parasite transmission. On advancing range edges, founder events and fitness/dispersal costs of parasitism may also cause parasites to be lost on range edges. Here we examine the prevalence of three species of parasite across the range edge of an invasive gecko, Hemidactylus frenatus, in northeastern Australia. The gecko's range edge spans the urban-woodland interface at the edge of urban areas. Across this edge,...

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