Department of Animal Ecology, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18D, Uppsala, SE-752 36, Sweden.
Mol Ecol. 2013 Sep;22(17):4591-601. doi: 10.1111/mec.12409.
Parasites may influence the outcome of interspecific competition between closely related host species through lower parasite virulence in the host with which they share the longer evolutionary history. We tested this idea by comparing the prevalence of avian malaria (Haemosporidia) lineages and their association with survival in pied and collared flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca and F. albicollis) breeding in a recent contact zone on the Swedish island of Öland. A nested PCR protocol amplifying haemosporidian fragments of mtDNA was used to screen the presence of malaria lineages in 1048 blood samples collected during 6 years. Competitively inferior pied flycatchers had a higher prevalence of blood parasites, including the lineages that were shared between the two flycatcher species. Multistate mark-recapture models revealed a lower survival of infected versus uninfected female pied flycatchers, while no such effects were detected in male pied flycatchers or in collared flycatchers of either sex. Our results show that a comparatively new host, the collared flycatcher, appears to be less susceptible to a local northern European malarial lineage where the collared flycatchers have recently expanded their distribution. Pied flycatchers experience strong reproductive interference from collared flycatchers, and the additional impact of species-specific blood parasite effects adds to this competitive exclusion. These results support the idea that parasites can strongly influence the outcome of interspecific competition between closely related host species, but that the invading species need not necessarily be more susceptible to local parasites.
寄生虫可能会通过降低与具有更长进化史的宿主共享的寄生虫毒力来影响密切相关的宿主物种之间的种间竞争结果。我们通过比较在瑞典 Öland 岛上的最近接触区繁殖的白腰杓鹬(Ficedula hypoleuca)和白额燕雀(F. albicollis)的鸟类疟疾(Haemosporidia)谱系的流行程度及其与生存的关联来检验这一观点。使用巢式 PCR 协议扩增 mtDNA 的血孢子虫片段,筛选了 6 年内采集的 1048 个血液样本中是否存在疟疾谱系。竞争力较弱的白腰杓鹬血液寄生虫的流行率更高,包括这两种燕雀之间共享的谱系。多状态标记重捕模型显示,感染的雌性白腰杓鹬的存活率低于未感染的雌性白腰杓鹬,而雄性白腰杓鹬或任何性别的白额燕雀均未检测到这种影响。我们的研究结果表明,相对较新的宿主,即白额燕雀,似乎对当地的北欧疟疾病系具有较低的易感性,而白额燕雀最近在其分布范围内有所扩大。白腰杓鹬受到白额燕雀的强烈繁殖干扰,而特定物种的血液寄生虫效应的额外影响加剧了这种竞争排斥。这些结果支持寄生虫可以强烈影响密切相关的宿主物种之间的种间竞争结果的观点,但入侵物种不一定更容易受到当地寄生虫的影响。