Blair L, Webster J P
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2007 Jan;20(1):54-61. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2006.01230.x.
Parasitism changes the host environment and may influence resource allocation between reproductive effort and somatic maintenance. We characterized the impact of dose-dependent schistosome exposure and/or infection establishment on intermediate host survival and reproduction. Four matched groups of Biomphalaria glabrata snails were individually exposed to increasing doses of Schistosoma mansoni parasites, with a fifth control group remaining unexposed. Increased mortality was observed amongst both snails infected and also those snails exposed to the parasite but within which infection did not establish, although only exposed but uninfected snails showed a dose-dependent increase in mortality. Snails also facultatively altered their reproductive output in response to parasite exposure: egg mass production decreased with increasing parasite dose in patently infected snails, whilst, in contrast, exposed but uninfected snails demonstrated a positive association between egg mass production and parasite dose in the post-patent period. These results uniquely suggest an exposure-dose-dependent post-patent fecundity compensation occurring in relation to the risk of future parasite-associated mortality.
寄生会改变宿主环境,并可能影响生殖投入和躯体维持之间的资源分配。我们描述了剂量依赖性血吸虫暴露和/或感染确立对中间宿主生存和繁殖的影响。将四组匹配的光滑双脐螺分别暴露于递增剂量的曼氏血吸虫寄生虫中,第五组作为对照组不进行暴露。在受感染的蜗牛以及那些暴露于寄生虫但未确立感染的蜗牛中均观察到死亡率增加,不过只有暴露但未感染的蜗牛显示出死亡率呈剂量依赖性增加。蜗牛还会根据寄生虫暴露情况适应性地改变其生殖产出:在明显感染的蜗牛中,随着寄生虫剂量增加,卵块产量下降,而相比之下,暴露但未感染的蜗牛在感染后期显示出卵块产量与寄生虫剂量之间呈正相关。这些结果独特地表明,与未来寄生虫相关死亡风险相关的感染后期繁殖力补偿存在暴露剂量依赖性。