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  4. An experimental study on the influence of tick infestations on nestling performance in great tits (Parus major)
 
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An experimental study on the influence of tick infestations on nestling performance in great tits (Parus major)

Auteur(s)
Gallizzi, Katharina
Bischoff, Linda L
Gern, Lise 
Institut de biologie 
Richner, Heinz
Date de parution
2008
In
The AUK
Vol.
4
No
125
De la page
915
A la page
922
Mots-clés
  • Ceratophyllus gallinae
  • cross-species resistance
  • Great Tit
  • Ixodes
  • ricinus
  • maternal effect
  • Parus major
  • FLEA CERATOPHYLLUS-GALLINAE
  • INDUCED MATERNAL RESPONSE
  • BURGDORFERI
  • SENSU-LATO
  • LIFE-HISTORY
  • BLUE TITS
  • BEGGING BEHAVIOR
  • PARASITE-DEFENSE
  • FEEDING PATTERNS
  • BREEDING SUCCESS
  • IMMUNE-RESPONSE
  • Ceratophyllus gallina...

  • cross-species resista...

  • Great Tit

  • Ixodes

  • ricinus

  • maternal effect

  • Parus major

  • FLEA CERATOPHYLLUS-GA...

  • INDUCED MATERNAL RESP...

  • BURGDORFERI

  • SENSU-LATO

  • LIFE-HISTORY

  • BLUE TITS

  • BEGGING BEHAVIOR

  • PARASITE-DEFENSE

  • FEEDING PATTERNS

  • BREEDING SUCCESS

  • IMMUNE-RESPONSE

Résumé
Parasite defense is costly, and the detrimental effects of parasites, which call be measured in terms of parasite virulence, are thought to be influenced by the resources available to the host and, ultimately, by environmental conditions. Hence, if conditions are good, hosts call tolerate a certain number of parasites without suffering severe effects. In addition, the presence of other, parasites call influence the virulence of a focal parasite either positively or negatively. We tested whether an experimental tick infestation reduced nestling performance in Great Tits (Parus major) and whether the effect was altered by a maternal response induced by Hell Fleas (Ceratophyllus gallinae) that is known to protect nestlings against flea infestations (i.e., we tested whether one parasite call alter the virulence of another parasite across [lost generations). We induced the maternal effect by experimentally infesting half the birds' nests with fleas during egg laying. After hatching, nestlings were cross-fostered into broods that then contained both nestlings with and without the maternal effect. Half of these broods were infested with five tick larvae per nestling. This resulted in tick infestation levels similar to levels found in natural populations. The tick infestation did not affect nestling mass, tarsus length, or time until fledging. Thus, all effect of the flea-induced maternal effect on tick virulence was not detectable. From these results, we concluded that either tick larvae do not affect nestlings, or nestlings or their parents can compensate for the negative consequences of tick infestations in numbers similar to those that occur in nature. Received 18 October 2007 accepted 11 April 2008.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/11712
Type de publication
journal article
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