Portions of the Reserve have experienced significant shoreline erosion, and these areas were recently restored using bags of oyster shell and novel \u201coyster catcher\u201d structures made of a latticework of concrete-wrapped burlap. While both techniques are capable of mitigating erosion, we are interested in determining if some methods are more effective at enhancing biodiversity over time, particularly for organisms like fish, birds, and reptiles like diamondback terrapins, which can be elusive and difficult to sample. As unlikely as it seems, parasites are our partners in these restoration efforts, providing clues that tell us those other organisms are in the general area.<\/p>\n
Shorelines in the Rachel Carson Reserve have been restored with bags of oyster shell (top), oyster catcher material (middle), and no-restoration control treatments (bottom).<\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/div>\nWe sample for parasites in easily-collected hosts like eastern mudsnails (Tritia obsoleta<\/em>), panopeid mud crabs, and small fishes like naked gobies (Gobiosoma bosc<\/em>), striped blennies (Chasmodes bosquianus<\/em>), skilletfish (Gobiesox strumosus<\/em>)\u00a0and oyster toadfish (Opsanus tau<\/em>). All of these hosts are relatively sedentary, which is important because we hypothesize that parasite diversity in these organisms will correlate with specific areas of shoreline within the reserve. Mud snails, for instance, are parasitized by nine different digenetic trematodes (a type of parasitic flatworm), each requiring a unique combination of hosts to complete its lifecycle (Table 1, below).<\/p>\nBy repeatedly sampling for these parasites at our restoration sites, we can get an idea of the number and types of additional hosts, based on the species of trematodes we find and the combination of hosts that each species requires. For example, if we are finding a high abundance of larval trematodes like Gynaecotyla adunca<\/em> or\u00a0Pleurogonius malaclemys<\/em>, we can infer that the final hosts these parasites require (shorebirds and diamondback terrapins, respectively) are also using these restored sites as habitat.<\/p>\nOur preliminary data show that habitat complexity enhances overall biodiversity, as both host and parasite diversity are higher in areas with natural marsh. It is too early to determine how parasite diversity is affected by habitat improvement at Carrot Island, though. Restoration was completed in May, and we are in the early stages of post-restoration monitoring. However, it has been said that \u201chome is where the habitat is,\u201d and we anticipate that parasite diversity will increase with time as additional hosts accumulate in areas with restored habitat.<\/p>\n
My advisor, April Blakeslee at East Carolina, and I expect to continue our work over the next few years to obtain an understanding of how long it takes for the full complement of hosts to return to a site following restoration. With our collaborators, Rachel Gittman at ECU and Brandon Puckett at the NC Coastal Reserve, we will also survey additional sites that have been restored within the last 20 years to look at the long-term influence of restoration on parasite diversity.<\/p>\n
By harnessing the multiplicity of links that parasites form in an ecosystem, we can use parasite diversity as a tool to inform and guide restoration projects. Perhaps, too, we can change the way people think about these ubiquitous and fascinating organisms.<\/p>\n
Table 1: Nine species of trematodes parasitize the common mudsnail Tritia obsoleta. Each species requires a unique combination of downstream hosts to complete its lifecycle. Courtesy of A.M.H. Blakeslee.<\/strong><\/em><\/p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Parasites have an image problem. They’re actually quite helpful.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":63,"featured_media":10965,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[690,37,1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-10963","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-currents","category-environmental-education","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
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