MacNeil Calum, Dick Jaimie T A, Hatcher Melanie J, Terry Rebecca S, Smith Judith E, Dunn Alison M
School of Biology and Biochemistry, Queen's University of Belfast, Medical Biology Centre, 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast BT9 7BL, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2003 Jun 22;270(1521):1309-14. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2003.2358.
Parasites can structure biological communities directly through population regulation and indirectly by processes such as apparent competition. However, the role of parasites in the process of biological invasion is less well understood and mechanisms of parasite mediation of predation among hosts are unclear. Mutual predation between native and invading species is an important factor in determining the outcome of invasions in freshwater amphipod communities. Here, we show that parasites mediate mutual intraguild predation among native and invading species and may thereby facilitate the invasion process. We find that the native amphipod Gammarus duebeni celticus is host to a microsporidian parasite, Pleistophora sp. (new species), with a frequency of infection of 0-90%. However, the parasite does not infect three invading species, G. tigrinus, G. pulex and Crangonyx pseudogracilis. In field and laboratory manipulations, we show that the parasite exhibits cryptic virulence: the parasite does not affect host fitness in single-species populations, but virulence becomes apparent when the native and invading species interact. That is, infection has no direct effect on G. d. celticus survivorship, size or fecundity; however, in mixed-species experiments, parasitized natives show a reduced capacity to prey on the smaller invading species and are more likely to be preyed upon by the largest invading species. Thus, by altering dominance relationships and hierarchies of mutual predation, parasitism strongly influences, and has the potential to change, the outcome of biological invasions.
寄生虫可以通过种群调节直接构建生物群落结构,也可以通过诸如似然竞争等过程间接构建。然而,寄生虫在生物入侵过程中的作用尚未得到充分理解,寄生虫介导宿主间捕食的机制也不清楚。本地物种与入侵物种之间的相互捕食是决定淡水双足动物群落入侵结果的一个重要因素。在这里,我们表明寄生虫介导了本地物种与入侵物种之间的种内相互捕食,从而可能促进入侵过程。我们发现本地双足动物凯尔特杜氏钩虾是一种微孢子虫寄生虫(新物种)的宿主,感染率为0 - 90%。然而,这种寄生虫不会感染三种入侵物种,即虎纹钩虾、蚤状钩虾和伪细螯虾。在野外和实验室操作中,我们表明这种寄生虫表现出隐性毒力:在单物种种群中,寄生虫不会影响宿主的适合度,但当本地物种与入侵物种相互作用时,毒力就会显现出来。也就是说,感染对凯尔特杜氏钩虾的存活率、体型或繁殖力没有直接影响;然而,在混合物种实验中,被寄生的本地物种捕食较小入侵物种的能力下降,并且更有可能被最大的入侵物种捕食。因此,通过改变优势关系和相互捕食的等级制度,寄生作用强烈影响并有可能改变生物入侵的结果。