Spatially different annual cycles but similar haemosporidian infections in distant populations of collared sand martins.
Steffen HahnMartins BriedisChristos BarboutisRaffaella SchmidMartin SchulzeNina SeifertTibor SzépTamara EmmeneggerPublished in: BMC zoology (2021)
Our study shows that blood parasite infections are common in several western Palaearctic breeding populations of collared sand martins who spent the nonbreeding season in West Africa and the lake Chad region. Due to long residency at the nonbreeding grounds blood parasite transmissions may mainly occur at host population-specific residences sites in Europe and Africa; the latter being likely facilitated by unsheltered roosting and thus high vulnerability to hematophagous insects. The rare cases of high parasitaemia during spring migration and breeding further indicates either relapses of chronic infection or primary infections which occurred shortly before migration and during breeding.