Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, Parque Científico, Universidad de Valencia, Paterna, Valencia, España.
Centro de Investigación Aplicada y Transferencia Tecnológica en Recursos Marinos Almirante Storni (CIMAS - CCT CONICET - CENPAT), San Antonio Oeste, Río Negro, Argentina.
Parasit Vectors. 2018 Mar 21;11(1):203. doi: 10.1186/s13071-018-2723-x.
At present, much research effort has been devoted to investigate overall ("average") responses of parasite populations to specific factors, e.g. density-dependence in fecundity or mortality. However, studies on parasite populations usually pay little attention to individual variation ("inequality") in reproductive success. A previous study on the acanthocephalan Corynosoma cetaceum in franciscana dolphins, Pontoporia blainvillei, revealed no overall intensity-dependent, or microhabitat effects, on mass and fecundity of worms. In this study, we investigated whether the same factors could influence mass inequalities for this species of acanthocephalan.
A total of 10,138 specimens of C. cetaceum were collected from 10 franciscanas accidentally caught in Buenos Aires Province between 1988 and 1990. To investigate mass inequalities, all the specimens were sexed, and females were classified according to their developmental stage and weighed. Additionally, the relationship between biomass and fecundity (estimated as the number of acanthors) was investigated for some females. Inequalities in fecundity and biomass were assessed using standard methods, i.e. the Lorenz curve and the Gini coefficient (G).
We found a modest, but highly significant linear relationship between mass and fecundity. The G was very low (0.314) compared with that from other helminth species. G values were significantly lower in gravid females, which presumably exhibit a slow rate of growth. Also, G values significantly increased with total intensity, but only for gravid females, and the effect was more predictable considering only the intensity of gravid females.
Apparently, high intensity infections increase inequality of reproducing females without producing "crowding" effects. Although several processes could generate this pattern, gravid females, at higher intensities, expanded their distribution and occupied gut chambers with contrasting environmental conditions, which might result in greater variability in body size. The observed inequalities are not expected to strongly influence the population genetics of C. cetaceum, but they reveal subtle individual effects beyond an overall population impact.
目前,许多研究都致力于研究寄生虫种群对特定因素的整体(“平均”)反应,例如在生育率或死亡率方面的密度依赖性。然而,对寄生虫种群的研究通常很少关注生殖成功的个体差异(“不平等”)。先前对在彭托皮利亚海牛(Pontoporia blainvillei)中发现的棘头虫科寄生虫 C. cetaceum 的研究表明,该寄生虫的密度依赖性或微生境效应对其体重和繁殖力没有总体影响。在本研究中,我们调查了相同的因素是否会影响该棘头虫物种的体重不平等。
总共从 1988 年至 1990 年期间在布宜诺斯艾利斯省意外捕获的 10 只彭托皮利亚海牛中收集了 10138 个 C. cetaceum 标本。为了研究体重不平等,所有标本均进行了性别鉴定,雌性则根据其发育阶段和体重进行分类。此外,还对一些雌性的生物量与繁殖力(估计为棘头的数量)之间的关系进行了调查。使用标准方法评估了繁殖力和生物量的不平等,即洛伦兹曲线和基尼系数(G)。
我们发现体重与繁殖力之间存在适度但高度显著的线性关系。与其他寄生虫物种相比,G 值非常低(0.314)。怀孕的雌性 G 值明显较低,这可能表明它们的生长速度较慢。此外,G 值随着总强度的增加而显著增加,但仅对怀孕的雌性而言,并且仅考虑怀孕雌性的强度,效果更可预测。
显然,高感染强度会增加繁殖雌性的不平等,而不会产生“拥挤”效应。尽管有几个过程可能产生这种模式,但在更高的强度下,怀孕的雌性会扩大其分布并占据具有不同环境条件的肠道腔室,这可能导致身体大小的更大变异性。观察到的不平等不太可能对 C. cetaceum 的种群遗传学产生重大影响,但它们揭示了超出总体种群影响的微妙个体效应。