Sousa Wayne P, Gleason Mary
Department of Zoology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Oecologia. 1989 Sep;80(4):456-464. doi: 10.1007/BF00380066.
This laboratory study examined the influence of parasitic infection by larval trematodes on the survival of extreme environmental conditions by the salt marsh snail, Cerithidea californica. Experimental treatments simulated the durations, combinations, and levels of potentially lethal environmental extremes to which the snail is exposed in its natural habitat, as determined from long-term field measurements. No significant difference was found in the rates of mortality suffered by infected and uninfected snails when exposed to simulated natural extremes of water temperature, water salinity, or exposure in air. Exposure to low levels of dissolved oxygen was the only treatment that caused differential mortality: infected snails died at higher rates than uninfected. This differential mortality was accentuated by high water temperature, and varied with the species of infecting parasite. The potential impact of this interaction between parasitism and anoxia on snail survival and population dynamics is discussed.
这项实验室研究考察了幼虫吸虫的寄生虫感染对加利福尼亚滨螺在极端环境条件下生存的影响。实验处理模拟了根据长期实地测量确定的该螺在其自然栖息地所面临的潜在致命环境极端情况的持续时间、组合和程度。当暴露于模拟的水温、水盐度或空气中的自然极端情况时,未发现受感染和未受感染的螺的死亡率有显著差异。暴露于低水平的溶解氧是唯一导致死亡率差异的处理方式:受感染的螺死亡率高于未受感染的。高温加剧了这种死亡率差异,并且随感染寄生虫的种类而变化。本文讨论了寄生与缺氧之间这种相互作用对螺的生存和种群动态的潜在影响。