Fredensborg B L, Poulin R
Department of Zoology, University of Otago, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Int J Parasitol. 2005 Sep;35(10):1061-70. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2005.05.005.
Density-dependent effects on parasite fitness have been documented from adult helminths in their definitive hosts. There have, however, been no studies on the cost of sharing an intermediate host with other parasites in terms of reduced adult parasite fecundity. Even if larval parasites suffer a reduction in size, caused by crowding, virtually nothing is known about longer-lasting effects after transmission to the definitive host. This study is the first to use in vitro cultivation with feeding of adult trematodes to investigate how numbers of parasites in the intermediate host affect the size and fecundity of adult parasites. For this purpose, we examined two different infracommunities of parasites in crustacean hosts. Firstly, we used experimental infections of Maritrema novaezealandensis in the amphipod, Paracalliope novizealandiae, to investigate potential density-dependent effects in single-species infections. Secondly, we used the crab, Macrophthalmus hirtipes (Ocypodidae), naturally infected by the trematodes, M. novaezealandensis and Levinseniella sp., the acanthocephalan, Profilicollis spp., and an acuariid nematode. These four helminths all develop and grow in their crustacean host before transmission to their bird definitive host by predation. In experimental infections, we found an intensity-dependent establishment success, with a decrease in the success rate of cercariae developing into infective metacercariae with an increasing dose of cercariae applied to each amphipod. In natural infections, we found that M. novaezealandensis-metacercariae achieved a smaller volume, on average, when infrapopulations of this parasite were large. Small metacercariae produced small in vitro-adult worms, which in turn produced fewer eggs. Crowding effects in the intermediate host thus were expressed at the adult stage in spite of the worms being cultured in a nutrient-rich medium. Furthermore, excystment success and egg-production in M. novaezealandensis in naturally infected crabs were influenced by the number of co-occurring Profilicollis cystacanths, indicating interspecific interactions between the two species. Our results thus indicate that the infracommunity of larval helminths in their intermediate host is interactive and that any density-dependent effect in the intermediate host may have lasting effects on individual parasite fitness.
在终末宿主体内,成虫阶段的蠕虫存在密度依赖对寄生虫适合度的影响已被记录。然而,关于与其他寄生虫共享中间宿主对成虫寄生虫繁殖力降低方面的代价,尚未有研究。即便幼虫寄生虫因拥挤导致体型减小,但对于其传播至终末宿主后的长期影响却几乎一无所知。本研究首次利用体外培养并投喂成虫吸虫,来探究中间宿主体内寄生虫数量如何影响成虫寄生虫的大小和繁殖力。为此,我们研究了甲壳类宿主体内两种不同的寄生虫群落。首先,我们利用新西兰海栖吸虫(Maritrema novaezealandensis)感染新西兰副沙蚕(Paracalliope novizealandiae),以研究单物种感染中潜在的密度依赖效应。其次,我们使用自然感染了吸虫新西兰海栖吸虫和列文森吸虫(Levinseniella sp.)、棘头虫类的普氏棘头虫(Profilicollis spp.)以及一种尖尾科线虫的招潮蟹(Macrophthalmus hirtipes,沙蟹科)。这四种蠕虫在通过捕食传播至鸟类终末宿主之前,均在其甲壳类宿主体内发育和生长。在实验感染中,我们发现了强度依赖的定殖成功率,随着施加于每只新西兰副沙蚕的尾蚴剂量增加,尾蚴发育为感染性后尾蚴的成功率降低。在自然感染中,我们发现当这种寄生虫的群落数量较大时,新西兰海栖吸虫后尾蚴的平均体积较小。小的后尾蚴产生的体外成虫较小,进而产卵也较少。因此,尽管蠕虫是在营养丰富的培养基中培养,但中间宿主中的拥挤效应在成虫阶段依然表现出来。此外,自然感染的螃蟹体内新西兰海栖吸虫的脱囊成功率和产卵量受到同时存在的普氏棘头虫囊棘数量的影响,表明这两个物种之间存在种间相互作用。因此,我们的结果表明,中间宿主体内幼虫蠕虫的群落是相互作用的,并且中间宿主中任何密度依赖效应都可能对个体寄生虫适合度产生持久影响。