Hopkins Skylar R, Boyle Lindsey J, Belden Lisa K, Wojdak Jeremy M
Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Biology Department, The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA, USA.
Oecologia. 2015 Oct;179(2):307-18. doi: 10.1007/s00442-015-3333-3. Epub 2015 May 12.
Symbiont dispersal is necessary for the maintenance of defense mutualisms in space and time, and the distribution of symbionts among hosts should be intricately tied to symbiont dispersal behaviors. However, we know surprisingly little about how most defensive symbionts find and choose advantageous hosts or what cues trigger symbionts to disperse from their current hosts. In a series of six experiments, we explored the dispersal ecology of an oligochaete worm (Chaetogaster limnaei) that protects snail hosts from infection by larval trematode parasites. Specifically, we determined the factors that affected net symbiont dispersal from a current "donor" host to a new "receiver" host. Symbionts rarely dispersed unless hosts directly came in contact with one another. However, symbionts overcame their reluctance to disperse across the open environment if the donor host died. When hosts came in direct contact, net symbiont dispersal varied with both host size and trematode infection status, whereas symbiont density did not influence the probability of symbiont dispersal. Together, these experiments show that symbiont dispersal is not a constant, random process, as is often assumed in symbiont dispersal models, but rather the probability of dispersal varies with ecological conditions and among individual hosts. The observed heterogeneity in dispersal rates among hosts may help to explain symbiont aggregation among snail hosts in nature.
共生体传播对于防御性共生关系在空间和时间上的维持至关重要,共生体在宿主间的分布应与共生体的传播行为紧密相连。然而,令人惊讶的是,我们对大多数防御性共生体如何找到并选择有利宿主,或者哪些线索触发共生体从当前宿主中传播出去知之甚少。在一系列六个实验中,我们探究了一种寡毛纲蠕虫(Limnaei腹毛管盘虫)的传播生态学,这种蠕虫可保护蜗牛宿主免受幼虫期吸虫寄生虫的感染。具体而言,我们确定了影响共生体从当前“供体”宿主向新“受体”宿主净传播的因素。除非宿主直接相互接触,共生体很少传播。然而,如果供体宿主死亡,共生体就会克服它们在开放环境中不愿传播的倾向。当宿主直接接触时,共生体的净传播随宿主大小和吸虫感染状态而变化,而共生体密度并不影响共生体传播的概率。总之,这些实验表明,共生体传播并非如共生体传播模型中通常假设的那样是一个恒定、随机的过程,而是传播概率随生态条件和个体宿主而变化。在宿主间观察到的传播速率异质性可能有助于解释自然界中蜗牛宿主间共生体的聚集现象。