Additive effects of ectoparasites over reproductive attempts in the long-lived Alpine swift

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_C0653802D159
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Additive effects of ectoparasites over reproductive attempts in the long-lived Alpine swift
Journal
Journal of Animal Ecology
Author(s)
Bize P., Roulin A., Tella J. L., Bersier L. F., Richner H.
ISSN
0021-8790
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2004
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
73
Number
6
Pages
1080-1088
Language
english
Abstract
1. Parasitism is a non-negligible cost of reproduction in wild organisms, and hosts are selected to partition resources optimally between current and future reproduction. While parents can compensate for the cost of parasitism by increasing their current reproductive investment, such change in resource allocation is expected to carry-over costs on future reproduction.
2. Life history theory predicts that because long-lived organisms have a high residual reproductive value, they should be more reluctant to increase parental effort in response to parasites. Also, when rearing successive infested broods, the cost of parasitism can cumulate over the years and hence be exacerbated by past infestations.
3. We tested these two predictions in the alpine swift Apus melba, a long-lived colonial bird that is infested intensely by the nest-based blood sucking louse-fly Crataerina melbae. For this purpose, we manipulated ectoparasite load over 3 consecutive years and measured reproductive parameters in successive breeding attempts of adults assigned randomly to 'parasitized' and 'deparasitized' treatments.
4. In current reproduction, fathers of experimentally parasitized broods produced a similar number of offspring as fathers from the deparasitized treatment, but the rearing period was prolonged by 4 days. Fathers that were assigned to the parasitized treatment in year x produced significantly fewer fledglings the following year x + 1 than those of the deparasitized treatment. The number of young produced by fathers in year x + 1 was correlated negatively with the number of days they cared for their brood in the previous year x. We also found a significant interaction between treatments performed over 2 successive years, with fathers of parasitized broods suffering a larger fitness loss if in the past they had already cared for a parasitized brood rather than for a deparasitized one. Similar effects of parasitism, although partly non-significant (0.05 < P-values > 0.10), were found in mothers.
5. Altogether, our results show that parasites can modify resource allocation between current and future reproduction in long-lived hosts, and that the cost of parasitism can cumulate over the years. It emphasizes the fact that effects of parasites can depend on past infestations and become apparent in future reproduction only.
Keywords
Apus melba, cost of plasticity, ectoparasite, hatching asynchrony, Hippoboscidae, life history theory, trade-off between current and future reproduction
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
24/01/2008 18:42
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:34
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