Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA.
Environmental Resilience Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2020 Sep 30;287(1935):20201831. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.1831. Epub 2020 Sep 23.
Urban habitats can shape interactions between hosts and parasites by altering not only exposure rates but also within-host processes. Artificial light at night (ALAN) is common in urban environments, and chronic exposure can impair host immunity in ways that may increase infection. However, studies of causal links between this stressor, immunity, and infection dynamics are rare, particularly in migratory animals. Here, we experimentally tested how ALAN affects cellular immunity and haemosporidian parasite intensity across the annual cycle of migrant and resident subspecies of the dark-eyed junco (). We monitored an experimental group exposed to light at night and a control group under natural light/dark cycles as they passed through short days simulating early spring to longer days simulating the breeding season, followed by autumn migration. Using generalized additive mixed models, we show that ALAN increased inflammation, and leucocyte counts were greatest in early spring and autumn. At the start of the experiment, few birds had active infections based on microscopy, but PCR revealed many birds had chronic infections. ALAN increased parasitaemia across the annual cycle, with strong peaks in spring and autumn that were largely absent in control birds. As birds were kept in indoor aviaries to prevent vector exposure, this increased parasitaemia indicates relapse of chronic infection during costly life-history stages (i.e. reproduction). Although the immunological and parasitological time series were in phase for control birds, cross-correlation analyses also revealed ALAN desynchronized leucocyte profiles and parasitaemia, which could suggest a general exaggerated inflammatory response. Our study shows how a common anthropogenic influence can shape within-host processes to affect infection dynamics.
城市生境通过改变暴露率和宿主体内过程来影响宿主与寄生虫之间的相互作用。夜间人工光照(ALAN)在城市环境中很常见,慢性暴露会损害宿主的免疫功能,从而增加感染的可能性。然而,关于这种应激源、免疫和感染动态之间的因果关系的研究很少,特别是在迁徙动物中。在这里,我们通过实验测试了 ALAN 如何影响候鸟和留鸟亚种的暗眼灯草雀()的细胞免疫和血孢子虫寄生虫强度的年度循环。我们监测了一个实验组在夜间暴露于光线下,对照组在自然光照/黑暗循环下,它们经历了模拟早春的短日到模拟繁殖季节的长日,然后是秋季迁徙。使用广义加性混合模型,我们表明 ALAN 增加了炎症,白细胞计数在早春和秋季最高。在实验开始时,根据显微镜检查,很少有鸟类有活跃的感染,但 PCR 显示许多鸟类有慢性感染。ALAN 在年度循环中增加了寄生虫血症,春季和秋季有强烈的高峰,而对照组中几乎没有。由于鸟类被关在室内鸟舍中以防止媒介暴露,因此寄生虫血症的增加表明在高成本的生活史阶段(即繁殖)中慢性感染的复发。尽管对照组的免疫和寄生虫时间序列同步,但互相关分析也揭示了 ALAN 使白细胞谱和寄生虫血症不同步,这可能表明普遍存在夸大的炎症反应。我们的研究表明,一种常见的人为影响如何塑造宿主体内过程来影响感染动态。