Montalva Felipe, Pérez-Venegas Diego, Gutiérrez Josefina, Seguel Mauricio
Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile.
PhD Program in Conservation Medicine, Facultad de Ciencias de la Vida Universidad Andrés Bello Santiago Chile.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Mar 7;9(7):3689-3699. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4914. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Parasites are an important part of ecosystems, playing a critical role in their equilibrium. However, the consequences of parasitism beyond the direct effects associated with disease and mortality are not completely understood. This gap in knowledge is in part due to the difficulties to isolate the effect of single parasite species on physiological and behavioral traits in natural systems.The South American fur seal ()-hookworm (.) interaction offers an ideal system to overcome these difficulties and study the behavioral and physiological effects of parasites in their hosts.Hookworms cause stunted growth and anemia in pinniped pups, which could affect early life active behaviors such as swimming. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of hookworms ( .) on the development of swimming capabilities in through physiological and ethological analyses.Higher parasite burden was associated with reduced growth rates and lower blood hemoglobin concentrations, whereas scaled body mass and blood hemoglobin levels had an important positive effect on the water activity of the pups. However, antihookworm treatment did not affect the level of water activity of the pups, and pups with high hookworm burden increased their time budget in water. This was probably related to lower maternal attendance in heavily parasitized pups, leaving these pups more time to perform water activities. Therefore, pups with heavy hookworm burden, despite having decreased growth rates and blood hemoglobin concentrations, compensated for their handicap in physiological traits related to swimming by spending more time in the water.This work offers new insights to understand the contrasting effects of parasites on aquatic organisms, and the compensatory mechanisms employed by infected animals to avoid the worst consequences of parasitism.
寄生虫是生态系统的重要组成部分,在生态平衡中发挥着关键作用。然而,除了与疾病和死亡相关的直接影响外,寄生现象的后果尚未完全被了解。知识上的这一差距部分是由于难以在自然系统中分离出单一寄生虫物种对生理和行为特征的影响。南美海狗与钩虫的相互作用提供了一个理想的系统来克服这些困难,并研究寄生虫对其宿主行为和生理的影响。钩虫会导致鳍足类幼崽生长发育迟缓并贫血,这可能会影响早期生活中的活跃行为,如游泳。本研究的目的是通过生理和行为学分析来确定钩虫对南美海狗游泳能力发展的影响。较高的寄生虫负荷与生长率降低和血液血红蛋白浓度降低有关,而标化体重和血液血红蛋白水平对幼崽的水活动有重要的积极影响。然而,抗钩虫治疗并未影响幼崽的水活动水平,且钩虫负荷高的幼崽增加了在水中的时间分配。这可能与重度感染幼崽的母兽照料时间减少有关,使这些幼崽有更多时间进行水活动。因此,尽管钩虫负荷重的幼崽生长率和血液血红蛋白浓度有所下降,但它们通过在水中花费更多时间来弥补与游泳相关生理特征上的缺陷。这项工作为理解寄生虫对水生生物的不同影响以及受感染动物为避免寄生最坏后果所采用的补偿机制提供了新的见解。