Journal
PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 115, Issue 9, Pages 3337-3344Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-016-5093-3
Keywords
Parasite fitness; Host defense; Gerbillus nanus; Xenopsylla conformis; Immunoglobulin G; Trade-offs
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Funding
- Israel Science Foundation [927/13, 26/12]
- United States-Israel Educational Foundation (USIEF Fulbright Post-Doctoral Fellowship) as well as the Swiss Institute for Dryland Environmental and Energy Research
- Blaustein Center for Scientific Cooperation
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Evaluating host resistance via parasite fitness helps place host-parasite relationships within evolutionary and ecological contexts; however, few studies consider both these processes simultaneously. We investigated how different levels of parasite pressure affect parasite mortality and reproductive success in relationship to host defense efforts, using the rodent Gerbillus nanus and the flea Xenopsylla conformis as a host-parasite system. Fifteen immune-na < ve male rodents were infested with 20, 50, or 100 fleas for four weeks. During this time number of new imagoes produced per adult flea (our flea reproductive output metric), flea mortality, and change in circulating anti-flea immunoglobulin G (our measure of adaptive immune defense) were monitored. Three hypotheses guided this work: (1) increasing parasite pressure would heighten host defenses; (2) parasite mortality would increase and parasite reproductive output would decrease with increasing investment in host defense; and (3) hosts under high parasite pressure could invest in behavioral and/or immune responses. We predicted that at high infestation levels (a) parasite mortality would increase; (b) flea reproductive output per individual would decrease; and (c) host circulating anti-flea antibody levels would increase. The hypotheses were partially supported. Flea mortality significantly increased and flea reproductive output significantly decreased as flea pressure increased. Host adaptive immune defense did not significantly change with increasing flea pressure. Therefore, we inferred that investment in host behavioral defense, either alone or in combination with density-dependent effects, may be more efficient at increasing flea mortality and decreasing flea reproductive output than antibody production during initial infestation in this system.
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