Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112-0840, USA.
Fuller Evolutionary Biology Program, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA.
Oecologia. 2020 Feb;192(2):363-374. doi: 10.1007/s00442-019-04582-y. Epub 2020 Jan 2.
Organisms allocate limited resources to competing activities such as reproduction, growth, and defense against parasites and predators. The introduction of a novel parasite may create new life history trade-offs. As hosts increase their investment in self-maintenance or defense, the cost of parasitism may carry over to other aspects of host biology. Here, in an experimental field study, we document delayed effects of an introduced nest parasite, Philornis downsi, on reproduction of Galápagos mockingbirds (Mimus parvulus). Parasitism of first nests reduced both the number and size of chicks that parents hatched when they re-nested several weeks later. The delayed effect of P. downsi on future reproduction may have been mediated by behavioral shifts by the parents to avoid or resist parasitism. Our results demonstrate that effects of parasitism can persist even after immediate exposure ends. We draw attention to the potential implications that introduced parasites have for host reproductive strategies.
生物会将有限的资源分配到繁殖、生长和抵御寄生虫和捕食者等竞争活动中。引入一种新的寄生虫可能会产生新的生活史权衡。随着宿主增加自我维护或防御的投入,寄生虫的成本可能会转嫁到宿主生物学的其他方面。在这里,在一项实验性的野外研究中,我们记录了引入的巢寄生虫 Philornis downsi 对加拉帕戈斯嘲鸫(Mimus parvulus)繁殖的延迟影响。第一窝巢的寄生减少了父母几周后重新筑巢时孵化的雏鸟的数量和大小。P. downsi 对未来繁殖的延迟影响可能是由父母为避免或抵抗寄生虫而产生的行为转变介导的。我们的研究结果表明,即使在寄生虫的直接影响结束后,寄生虫的影响仍可能持续存在。我们提请注意引入的寄生虫对宿主繁殖策略可能产生的潜在影响。