Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2007
Evaluation of proximate mechanisms (e.g. dispersal, immigration, competition, facilitation) that determine patterns of assemblage or community structure is an important step in the development of paradigms in ecology. Host–parasite systems are useful for such studies because host-parasite assemblages are easily defined units of study, each host individual harbours a sample from a community or assemblage, and many host species are common, providing replicate samples. I used ectoparasite assemblages from Noctilio leporinus collected from Paraguay to evaluate effects of host sex and body size on ectoparasite abundance and to determine if these assemblages exhibit a nested pattern of species co-occurrence. A total of 533 ectoparasites representing seven species and four families were collected from 28 hosts. Abundances of Paradyschiria fusca and Noctiliostrebla aitkeni responded positively to host body size. Host sex had no affect on ectoparasite abundances. Streblid bat fly assemblages from Noctilio leporinus were strongly and significantly nested. Abundances of all species of streblid were positively correlated with one another with Pearson product moment correlation coefficients between 0.424 and 0.646. Competition does not appear to affect community structure of streblids from Paraguayan Noctilio leporinus. Independent responses of species of streblid to host characteristics appear to mould assemblage structure in this system.
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