Ots Indrek, Hõrak Peeter
Institute of Zoology and Hydrobiology, Tartu University, Riia 181, EE2400 Tartu, Estonia, , , , , , EE.
Estonian Institute of Zoology and Botany, Riia 181, EE2400 Tartu, Estonia e-mail:
Oecologia. 1998 Oct;116(4):441-448. doi: 10.1007/s004420050608.
Hypotheses of hemoparasite-mediated sexual selection and reproductive costs rely on the assumption that avian blood parasite infections are harmful to their hosts. To test the validity of this assumption, we examined the health impact of Haemoproteus blood parasites on their great tit (Parus major) host. We hypothesised that if blood parasites impose any serious health impact on their avian hosts, then infected individuals must differ from uninfected ones in respect to hemato-serological general health and immune parameters. A 3-year study of two great tit populations, breeding in contrasting (urban and rural) habitats in south-east Estonia, revealed that Haemoproteus blood parasites affected the health state of their avian hosts. Infected individuals had elevated lymphocyte hemoconcentration and plasma gamma-globulin levels, indicating that both cell-mediated and humoral immune response mechanisms are involved in host defence. The effect of parasites on cell-mediated immunity was both age- and sex-specific, as infection status affected peripheral blood lymphocyte counts only in males, and among these, the magnitude of response was greater in old individuals than yearlings. Heterophile hemoconcentration and plasma albumin levels were not affected by infection status, suggesting that blood stages of Haemoproteus infection do not cause a severe inflammatory response. Parasitism was not related to hematocrit values, indicating that Haemoproteus infection does not cause anemia. In two years, infected individuals were heavier than uninfected ones in the urban but not in the rural study area. This suggests, that under certain circumstances (possibly related to reproductive tactics), breeding great tits may avoid losing body mass in order to save resources for an anti-parasite immune response.
血寄生虫介导的性选择和繁殖成本假说依赖于这样一种假设,即鸟类血液寄生虫感染对其宿主有害。为了检验这一假设的有效性,我们研究了变形血原虫血液寄生虫对大山雀(Parus major)宿主健康的影响。我们假设,如果血液寄生虫对其鸟类宿主造成任何严重的健康影响,那么受感染个体在血液血清学总体健康和免疫参数方面必然与未受感染个体不同。对爱沙尼亚东南部两个在不同(城市和农村)栖息地繁殖的大山雀种群进行的为期3年的研究表明,变形血原虫血液寄生虫影响了其鸟类宿主的健康状况。受感染个体的淋巴细胞血浓度和血浆γ-球蛋白水平升高,表明细胞介导和体液免疫反应机制都参与了宿主防御。寄生虫对细胞介导免疫的影响具有年龄和性别特异性,因为感染状况仅影响雄性外周血淋巴细胞计数,而且在这些雄性中,老龄个体的反应程度大于一岁个体。嗜异性细胞血浓度和血浆白蛋白水平不受感染状况的影响,这表明变形血原虫感染的血液阶段不会引起严重的炎症反应。寄生虫感染与血细胞比容值无关,表明变形血原虫感染不会导致贫血。在两年时间里,城市研究区域内受感染个体比未受感染个体重,而农村研究区域则不然。这表明,在某些情况下(可能与繁殖策略有关),繁殖期的大山雀可能会避免体重减轻,以便节省资源用于抗寄生虫免疫反应。