Stephenson Jessica F, van Oosterhout Cock, Mohammed Ryan S, Cable Joanne
Ecology. 2015 Feb;96(2):489-98. doi: 10.1890/14-0495.1.
Predation pressure can alter the morphology, physiology, life history, and behavior of prey; each of these in turn can change how surviving prey interact with parasites. These trait-mediated indirect effects may change in direction or intensity during growth or, in sexually dimorphic species, between the sexes. The Trinidadian guppy, Poecilia reticulata presents a unique opportunity to examine these interactions; its behavioral ecology has been intensively studied in wild populations with well-characterized predator faunas. Predation pressure is known to have driven the evolution of many guppy traits; for example, in high-predation sites, females (but not males) tend to shoal, and this anti-predator behavior facilitates parasite transmission. To test for evidence of predator-driven differences in infection in natural populations, we collected 4715 guppies from 62 sites across Trinidad between 2003 and 2009 and screened them for ectosymbionts, including Gyrodactylus. A novel model-averaging analysis revealed that females were more likely to be infected with Gyrodactylus parasites than males, but only in populations with both high predation pressure and high infection prevalence. We propose that the difference in shoaling tendency between the sexes could explain the observed difference in infection prevalence between males and females in high-predation sites. The infection rate of juveniles did not vary with predation regime, probably because juveniles face constant predation pressure from conspecific adults and therefore tend to shoal in both high- and low-predation sites. This represents the first evidence for age- and sex-specific trait-mediated indirect effects of predators on the probability of infection in their prey.
捕食压力能够改变猎物的形态、生理、生活史及行为;而这些变化又会反过来改变存活猎物与寄生虫之间的相互作用方式。在生长过程中,或者在两性异形的物种中,在不同性别之间,这些由性状介导的间接影响可能会在方向或强度上发生变化。特立尼达孔雀鱼(Poecilia reticulata)为研究这些相互作用提供了一个独特的机会;其行为生态学在具有特征明确的捕食动物群落的野生种群中得到了深入研究。已知捕食压力推动了许多孔雀鱼性状的进化;例如,在高捕食压力的环境中,雌性(而非雄性)倾向于聚集在一起,这种反捕食行为促进了寄生虫的传播。为了检验自然种群中捕食者驱动的感染差异的证据,我们在2003年至2009年间从特立尼达的62个地点收集了4715条孔雀鱼,并对它们进行了体外共生生物筛查,包括三代虫。一种新颖的模型平均分析表明,雌性比雄性更有可能感染三代虫寄生虫,但仅在捕食压力高且感染率高的种群中如此。我们认为,两性在聚集倾向方面的差异可以解释在高捕食压力环境中观察到的雄性和雌性在感染率上的差异。幼鱼的感染率并不随捕食环境而变化,可能是因为幼鱼面临来自同种成年鱼的持续捕食压力,因此在高捕食压力和低捕食压力环境中都倾向于聚集。这是捕食者对其猎物感染概率产生年龄和性别特异性性状介导间接影响的首个证据。