Journal
SCIENCE OF NATURE
Volume 109, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00114-022-01793-x
Keywords
Parasite load; Inflammatory response; Gonadal cycle; Asynchronous cycle; Sceloporus torquatus
Categories
Funding
- Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia
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This study presents the first comparison of phenological variation in parasite load and inflammatory response in a lizard with asynchronous male and female gonadal cycles. The results suggest that parasite load differs between sexes and seasons, but there is no relationship between parasite load, body condition, and inflammatory response. The study highlights the complex interactions between hosts and parasites, which are influenced by both environmental and internal factors.
We present the first study that compares phenological variation in parasite load and inflammatory response in a lizard with asynchronous male and female gonadal cycles. Other studies have used many species with seasonal and synchronous reproductive cycles, in which it is difficult to decouple the effects of internal and external factors that can affect parasite abundance in each sex. Species with asynchronous reproductive cycles provide the opportunity to study the effects of seasonality and reproductive condition separately, but few studies have documented variation in parasite abundance in these species. We made an extensive comparison of parasite load and inflammatory response of the lizard Sceloporus torquatus, a species with asynchronous reproductive cycles, throughout its active period. We hypothesized that the parasite load would be higher in the period of maximum gonadal activity for each sex, negatively related to body condition and inflammatory response. Our results partially support the hypothesis; males had more parasites in summer than in spring and autumn, while females had more parasites in spring and summer than in autumn; however, we do not find a relationship between parasite load, body condition and inflammatory response. Our results indicated that host-parasite interactions are complex and depend upon both environmental and internal factors. Therefore, longer-term studies may provide a more comprehensive picture of host-parasite dynamics in populations of wild lizards.
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