Khokhlova Irina S, Dlugosz Elizabeth M, Krasnov Boris R
Wyler Department of Dryland Agriculture,French Associates Institute for Agriculture and Biotechnology of Drylands,Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research,Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,Sede-Boqer Campus,8499000 Midreshet Ben-Gurion,Israel.
Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology,Swiss Institute for Dryland Environmental and Energy Research,Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research,Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,Sede-Boqer Campus,8499000 Midreshet Ben-Gurion,Israel.
Parasitology. 2015 Oct;142(12):1535-42. doi: 10.1017/S0031182015001006. Epub 2015 Aug 18.
To understand mechanisms behind positive interspecific co-occurrences in flea infracommunities, we asked whether co-infestation results in an increase of flea fitness (quantity and/or quality of the offspring). We studied reproductive performance of Xenopsylla ramesis and Parapulex chephrenis when they exploited their characteristic host (Meriones crassus and Acomys cahirinus, respectively) either alone or together with another species. We used egg production, the number of new imagoes, pre-imaginal survival and egg size as fitness-related variables and predicted that fitness will be higher in fleas feeding in mixed- than in single-species groups. In both fleas, mean number of eggs produced per female flea did not depend on experimental treatment. No effect of single- vs mixed-species infestation on the mean number of new imagoes per female and the number of emerged imagoes per egg was found for X. ramesis, whereas both these numbers were higher in mixed- than in single-species groups for P. chephrenis. X. ramesis produced eggs of similar size independently of treatment, whereas eggs produced by P. chephrenis in mixed-species groups were significantly larger than eggs produced in single-species groups. We conclude that an increase in reproductive performance as a response to co-infestation may be one of the mechanisms behind aggregative structure of flea infracommunities. However, this response may vary among flea species.
为了理解跳蚤群落中种间正共存背后的机制,我们探究了共同寄生是否会导致跳蚤适合度(后代数量和/或质量)的增加。我们研究了印鼠客蚤和切氏副蚤在单独寄生或与另一个物种共同寄生时,利用其特征宿主(分别为肥尾心颅跳鼠和埃及刺毛鼠)的繁殖表现。我们将产卵量、新羽化个体数量、幼虫期存活率和卵大小作为与适合度相关的变量,并预测混合种群中取食的跳蚤比单一种群中的跳蚤适合度更高。对于这两种跳蚤,每只雌蚤的平均产卵数均不依赖于实验处理。对于印鼠客蚤,单种与混合种群寄生对每只雌蚤的新羽化个体平均数和每枚卵羽化出的个体数均无影响,而对于切氏副蚤,这两个数值在混合种群中均高于单一种群。印鼠客蚤所产的卵大小相似,不受处理影响,而切氏副蚤在混合种群中所产的卵显著大于单一种群所产的卵。我们得出结论,作为对共同寄生的响应,繁殖表现的增加可能是跳蚤群落聚集结构背后的机制之一。然而,这种响应可能因跳蚤种类而异。