Centro de Investigación e Innovación para el Cambio Climático (CiiCC), Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Santo Tomás, Ejército 146, Santiago, Chile; Programa de Doctorado en Conservación y Gestión de la Biodiversidad, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Santo Tomás, Ejército 146, Santiago, Chile.
Departamento de Ecología y Biodiversidad, Facultad de Ciencias de la Vida, Universidad Andres Bello, República 440, Santiago, Chile.
Mar Environ Res. 2020 May;157:104923. doi: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2020.104923. Epub 2020 Feb 17.
Parasites alter the reproductive performance of their hosts, limit their growth, and thereby modify the energy budget of these hosts. Experimental studies and theoretical models suggest that the outcome of the host-parasite interactions could be determined by ecological factors such as food availability levels in the local habitats. Nutrient inputs may affect the host's food resource availability with positive or negative effects on parasite infection rates and tolerance of infection, however this has not been specifically evaluated in natural systems. In this study, we evaluate the effects of parasitism by Proctoeces humboldti on body size, gonadosomatic index (GSI), and metabolic rate (oxygen consumption) of their second intermediate host Fissurella crassa limpets, under contrasting natural conditions of productivity (upwelling center vs upwelling shadow sites). Our results evidenced that parasitized limpets collected from the intertidal habitat influenced by coastal upwelling site showed greater shell length, muscular foot biomass and GSI as compared to non-parasitized limpets collected in the same site, and compared to parasitized and non-parasitized limpets collected from the sites under the influence of upwelling shadow conditions. Oxygen consumption was lower in parasitized limpets collected from the upwelling-influenced site than in the other groups, independent of age, suggesting reduced metabolic stress in infected individuals inhabiting these productive sites. Our results suggest that increased productivity in upwelling sites could mitigate the conflict for resources in the P. humboldti - F. crassa system, influencing where such interaction is found in the continuum between parasitism and mutualism. Since parasitism is ubiquitous in natural systems, and play important roles in ecological and evolutionary processes, it is important to analyze host-parasite interaction across a variety of ecological conditions, especially in biological conservation.
寄生虫会改变宿主的繁殖性能、限制其生长,从而改变宿主的能量预算。实验研究和理论模型表明,宿主-寄生虫相互作用的结果可能取决于生态因素,例如当地栖息地的食物可利用水平。营养物质的输入可能会影响宿主的食物资源可利用性,对寄生虫感染率和对感染的耐受性产生积极或消极的影响,但这在自然系统中尚未得到具体评估。在这项研究中,我们评估了在生产力存在差异的自然条件下(上升流中心与上升流阴影区),第二中间宿主 Fissurella crassa 石鳖身上的 Proctoeces humboldti 寄生虫对其体型、生殖腺指数(GSI)和代谢率(耗氧量)的影响。研究结果表明,与在同一地点采集的未感染石鳖相比,在沿海上升流影响的潮间带生境中采集的感染石鳖的壳长、肌肉足生物量和 GSI 更大,而与在上升流阴影区影响的地点采集的感染和未感染的石鳖相比也是如此。与其他组相比,在上升流影响的地点采集的感染石鳖的耗氧量较低,这与年龄无关,表明感染个体在这些生产力较高的地点生活时,代谢压力降低。我们的研究结果表明,上升流区生产力的提高可能会减轻 P. humboldti - F. crassa 系统中资源的冲突,从而影响这种相互作用在寄生和共生之间的连续体中的出现位置。由于寄生虫在自然系统中普遍存在,并在生态和进化过程中发挥着重要作用,因此有必要在各种生态条件下分析宿主-寄生虫相互作用,特别是在生物保护方面。