22 research outputs found

    Multidimensionality and intra-individual variation in host manipulation by an acanthocephalan

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    Trophically-transmitted parasites frequently alter multiple aspects of their host's phenotype. Correlations between modified characteristics may suggest how different traits are mechanistically related, but these potential relationships remain unexplored. We recorded 5 traits from individual isopods infected with an acanthocephalan (Acanthocephalus lucii): hiding, activity, substrate colour preference, body (pereon) coloration, and abdominal (pleon) coloration. Infected isopods hid less and had darker abdominal coloration than uninfected isopods. However, in 3 different experiments measuring hiding behaviour (time-scales of observation: 1h, 8h, 8 weeks), these two modified traits were not correlated, suggesting they may arise via independent mechanisms. For the shorter experiments (1h and 8h), confidence in this null correlation was undermined by low experimental repeatability, i.e. individuals did not behave similarly in repeated trials of the experiment. However, in the 8-week experiment, hiding behaviour was relatively consistent within individuals, so the null correlation at this scale indicates, less equivocally, that hiding and coloration are unrelated. Furthermore, the difference between the hiding behaviour of infected and uninfected isopods varied over 8 weeks, suggesting that the effect of A. lucii infection on host behaviour changes over time. We emphasize the importance of carefully designed protocols for investigating multidimensionality in host manipulatio

    acanthocephalans in their paratenic fish hosts in the northern Baltic Sea

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    Cystacanth stages of three Corynosoma (Acanthocephala) species, C. strumosum and C. semerme, and a new species in the Bothnian Bay, C. magdaleni, were studied in the fourhorn sculpin (Myoxocephalus quadricornis) in 1996-1997. The length of the trunk and proboscis differentiated the three species in the fish. The stability of the Corynosoma infection was studied by comparing the present results with those collected from the same areas (central and coastal) in 1977-1982 (Valtonen, 1983a). As C. magdaleni and C. strumosum were not separated at that time, the joint infections of these two species (called "C. slrumosum") were compared. The stability of infection with C. semerme in the central Bothnian Bay was noticeable (prevalences were 82.9 in earlier period and 81.9 % in later period), while the prevalences of "C. strumosum" in the same areas had decreased (21 and 1 3.5 %, respectively). This is suggested to be due to the disappearance of the marine bull-rout, Myoxocephalus scorpius, from the Bothnian Bay during the 1990s due to an overall decline in salinity throughout the Baltic Sea. In the coastal area Corynosoma infection was clearly lower than in central area in both periods

    Corynosoma acanthocephalans in their paratenic fish hosts in the northern Baltic Sea

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    Cystacanth stages of three Corynosoma (Acanthocephala) species, C. strumosum and C. semerme, and a new species in the Bothnian Bay, C. magdaleni, were studied in the fourhorn sculpin (Myoxocephalus quadricornis) in 1996-1997. The length of the trunk and proboscis differentiated the three species in the fish. The stability of the Corynosoma infection was studied by comparing the present results with those collected from the same areas (central and coastal) in 1977-1982 (Valtonen, 1983a). As C. magdaleni and C. strumosum were not separated at that time, the joint infections of these two species (called "C. slrumosum") were compared. The stability of infection with C. semerme in the central Bothnian Bay was noticeable (prevalences were 82.9 in earlier period and 81.9 % in later period), while the prevalences of "C. strumosum" in the same areas had decreased (21 and 1 3.5 %, respectively). This is suggested to be due to the disappearance of the marine bull-rout, Myoxocephalus scorpius, from the Bothnian Bay during the 1990s due to an overall decline in salinity throughout the Baltic Sea. In the coastal area Corynosoma infection was clearly lower than in central area in both periods

    Interactions among co-infecting parasite species: a mechanism maintaining genetic variation in parasites?

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    Individuals of free-living organisms are often infected simultaneously by a community of parasites. If the co-infecting parasites interact, then this can add significantly to the diversity of host genotype×parasite genotype interactions. However, interactions between parasite species are usually not examined considering potential variation in interactions between different strain combinations of co-infecting parasites. Here, we examined the importance of interactions between strains of fish eye flukes Diplostomum spathaceum and Diplostomum gasterostei on their infectivity in naive fish hosts. We assessed the infection success of strains of both species in single-strain exposures and in co-exposures with a random strain of the other species. Parasite infection success did not consistently increase or decrease in the co-exposure treatment, but depended on the combinations of co-infecting parasite strains. This disrupted the relative infectivity of D. spathaceum strains observed in single-strain exposures. The infection success of D. gasterostei strains was independent of exposure type. These results suggest that interactions among parasite species may be strain specific and potentially promote maintenance of genetic polymorphism in parasite populations
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