Tripartite associations between Afrotropical bats, eukaryotic parasites,
and microbial symbionts
Abstract
Skin is the largest mammalian organ and the first defensive barrier
against the external environment. The skin and fur of mammals can host a
wide variety of ectoparasites, many of which are phylogenetically
diverse, specialized, and specifically adapted to their hosts. Among
hematophagous dipteran parasites, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are
known to serve as important attractants, leading parasites to compatible
sources of blood meals. VOCs have been hypothesized to be mediated by
host-associated bacteria, which may thereby indirectly influence
parasitism. Host-associated bacteria may also influence parasitism
directly, as has been observed in interactions between animal gut
microbiota and malarial parasites. Hypotheses relating bacterial
symbionts and eukaryotic parasitism have rarely been tested among humans
and domestic animals, and have to our knowledge never been tested in
wild vertebrates. In this study, we use Afrotropical bats, hematophagous
ectoparasitic bat flies, and haemosporidian (malarial) parasites
vectored by bat flies as a model to test the hypothesis that the
vertebrate host microbiome is linked to parasitism in a wild system. We
identify significant correlations between bacterial community
composition of the skin and dipteran ectoparasite prevalence across four
major bat lineages, as well as striking differences in skin microbial
network characteristics between ectoparasitized and non-ectoparasitized
bats. We also identify links between the oral microbiome and presence of
malarial parasites among miniopterid bats. Our results support the
hypothesis that microbial symbionts may serve as indirect mediators of
parasitism among eukaryotic hosts and parasites.