TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of parasitism on host reproductive investment in a rodent–flea system
T2 - host litter size matters
AU - Warburton, Elizabeth M.
AU - Khokhlova, Irina S.
AU - Der Mescht, Luther Van
AU - Krasnov, Boris R.
N1 - Funding Information: The authors thank the anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on the manuscript. This study was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (grant number 26/12 to B.R.K. and I.S.K.). E.M.W. received financial support from the US???Israel Education Foundation (USIEF Fulbright Post-Doctoral Fellowship) and the Swiss Institute for Dryland Environmental and Energy Research. E.M.D. received financial support from the Blaustein Center for Scientific Cooperation, the Kreitman School of Advanced Graduate Studies and the Swiss Institute for Dryland Environmental and Energy Research. L.V.D.M. received financial support from the Blaustein Center for Scientific Cooperation and the French Associates Institute for Agriculture and Biotechnology of Drylands. This is publication number 920 of the Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology. Publisher Copyright: © 2016, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
PY - 2017/2/1
Y1 - 2017/2/1
N2 - Parents may alter offspring phenotype depending on the type of environment they encounter. Parasitism is a common stressor; therefore, maternal reproductive investment could change in response to parasitic infection. However, few experiments have investigated the relationship between parasitism and maternal investment, whereas earlier field studies provided contradictory evidence. We investigated number, sex ratio, and growth of offspring in two rodent species, solitary altricial Meriones crassus and social precocial Acomys cahirinus, exposed to parasitism by fleas Xenopsylla ramesis and Parapulex chephrenis. No effect of treatment on litter size or sex ratio of a litter was found in either rodent species. Flea parasitism was found to affect pre-weaning body mass gain in M. crassus, but not in A. cahirinus pups. Furthermore, it appeared that female M. crassus invested resources into their offspring differently in dependence of litter size. In small litters (1–3 offspring), pups from infested females gained more body mass before weaning than pups from uninfested mothers. However, this trend was reversed in females with large litters indicating that parasitized females have a finite amount of resources with which to provision their young. Thus, M. crassus mothers parasitized by fleas seemed to receive some sort of external cues (e.g., stress caused by infestation) that prompted them to alter offspring provisioning, depending on species-specific possibilities and constraints. Therefore, parasites could be a mediator of environmentally induced maternal effects and offspring provisioning may have adaptive value against parasitism.
AB - Parents may alter offspring phenotype depending on the type of environment they encounter. Parasitism is a common stressor; therefore, maternal reproductive investment could change in response to parasitic infection. However, few experiments have investigated the relationship between parasitism and maternal investment, whereas earlier field studies provided contradictory evidence. We investigated number, sex ratio, and growth of offspring in two rodent species, solitary altricial Meriones crassus and social precocial Acomys cahirinus, exposed to parasitism by fleas Xenopsylla ramesis and Parapulex chephrenis. No effect of treatment on litter size or sex ratio of a litter was found in either rodent species. Flea parasitism was found to affect pre-weaning body mass gain in M. crassus, but not in A. cahirinus pups. Furthermore, it appeared that female M. crassus invested resources into their offspring differently in dependence of litter size. In small litters (1–3 offspring), pups from infested females gained more body mass before weaning than pups from uninfested mothers. However, this trend was reversed in females with large litters indicating that parasitized females have a finite amount of resources with which to provision their young. Thus, M. crassus mothers parasitized by fleas seemed to receive some sort of external cues (e.g., stress caused by infestation) that prompted them to alter offspring provisioning, depending on species-specific possibilities and constraints. Therefore, parasites could be a mediator of environmentally induced maternal effects and offspring provisioning may have adaptive value against parasitism.
KW - Acomys cahirinus
KW - Fleas
KW - Meriones crassus
KW - Offspring growth
KW - Parapulex chephrenis
KW - Parental effects
KW - Rodents
KW - Xenopsylla ramesis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85000762768&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00436-016-5336-3
DO - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00436-016-5336-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 27900542
SN - 0932-0113
VL - 116
SP - 703
EP - 710
JO - Parasitology Research
JF - Parasitology Research
IS - 2
ER -