Walsh Patrick T, McCreless Erin, Pedersen Amy B
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.
Anim Behav. 2013 Sep;86(3):559-566. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.06.011.
Host-parasite interactions are a key determinant of the population dynamics of wild animals, and behaviours that reduce parasite transmission and infection may be important for improving host fitness. While antiparasite behaviours have been demonstrated in laboratory animals and domesticated ungulates, whether these behaviours operate in the wild is poorly understood. Therefore, examining antiparasite behaviours in natural populations is crucial for understanding their ecological significance. In this study, we examined whether two wild rodents (white-footed mice, , and deer mice, ), selectively foraged away from conspecific faeces or avoided faeces altogether, and whether faecal gastrointestinal parasite status affected their behaviour. We also tested whether wild mice, when nesting, avoided using material that had previously been used by healthy or parasite-infected conspecifics. Our results, in contrast to laboratory mouse studies, suggest that wild mice do not demonstrate faecal avoidance, selective foraging or selective use of nesting material; they preferred being near faeces and did not differentiate between faeces from parasitized and uninfected conspecifics. Behavioural avoidance to reduce parasite infection may still represent an important strategy; however, mice in our study population appeared to favour the opportunity to feed and nest over the risks of coming into contact with faecal-transmitted parasites. Furthermore, the presence of conspecific faeces may actually provide a positive cue of a good foraging or nesting location. Ultimately, balancing the trade-off of performing antiparasite behaviours to reduce infection with missing an important feeding or nesting opportunity may be very different for animals in the wild facing complex and stochastic environments.
宿主与寄生虫的相互作用是野生动物种群动态的关键决定因素,而减少寄生虫传播和感染的行为可能对提高宿主适应性很重要。虽然在实验动物和家养有蹄类动物中已证明存在抗寄生虫行为,但这些行为在野外是否起作用却知之甚少。因此,研究自然种群中的抗寄生虫行为对于理解其生态意义至关重要。在本研究中,我们研究了两种野生啮齿动物(白足鼠和鹿鼠)是否会选择性地远离同种粪便觅食或完全避开粪便,以及粪便中胃肠道寄生虫的状况是否会影响它们的行为。我们还测试了野生小鼠在筑巢时是否会避免使用先前被健康或感染寄生虫的同种个体使用过的材料。与实验室小鼠研究不同,我们的结果表明野生小鼠没有表现出粪便回避、选择性觅食或筑巢材料的选择性使用;它们更喜欢靠近粪便,并且不会区分来自感染寄生虫和未感染寄生虫的同种个体的粪便。通过行为回避来减少寄生虫感染可能仍然是一种重要策略;然而,我们研究种群中的小鼠似乎更倾向于觅食和筑巢的机会,而不是接触粪便传播寄生虫的风险。此外,同种粪便的存在实际上可能为良好的觅食或筑巢地点提供积极线索。最终,对于面临复杂和随机环境的野生动物来说,平衡执行抗寄生虫行为以减少感染与错过重要觅食或筑巢机会之间的权衡可能会大不相同。