Schall J J, Dearing M D
Department of Zoology, University of Vermont, 05405, Burlington, VT, USA.
Oecologia. 1987 Sep;73(3):389-392. doi: 10.1007/BF00385255.
The effect of malarial parasitism on the ability of male western fence lizards, Sceloporus occidentalis, to compete for access to females was assessed experimentally. Pairs of male lizards, one infected with the malarial parasite, Plasmodium mexicanum, and the other not infected, were matched by size and color and placed in large seminatural outdoor enclosures along with an adult female lizard. Infected males displayed to females and to other males less often than did noninfected male lizards. Noninfected lizards were dominant in social interactions more often than malarious animals, based on duration and intensity of agonistic encounters toward the other male, and time spent with the female. Thus, malarial infection hinders the ability of male fence lizards to compete for mates.
通过实验评估了疟疾寄生对雄性西部围栏蜥蜴(Sceloporus occidentalis)争夺与雌性交配机会能力的影响。将一对雄性蜥蜴(一只感染了疟原虫墨西哥疟原虫,另一只未感染)按大小和颜色配对,并与一只成年雌性蜥蜴一起放置在大型半自然户外围栏中。受感染的雄性向雌性和其他雄性展示的频率低于未感染的雄性蜥蜴。根据对另一只雄性的争斗遭遇的持续时间和强度以及与雌性相处的时间,未感染的蜥蜴在社交互动中比感染疟疾的动物更具主导性。因此,疟疾感染会阻碍雄性围栏蜥蜴争夺配偶的能力。