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1.
R Soc Open Sci ; 9(1): 211774, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35116166

ABSTRACT

Fear plays a crucial role in predator-prey interactions and can have cascading impacts on the structure of whole ecosystems. Comparable fear effects have recently been described for hosts and their parasites but our understanding of the underlying mechanisms remains limited by the lack of empirical examples. Here, we experimentally tested if bivalves Mytilus edulis can potentially 'learn to fear' the infective transmission stages (cercariae) of the trematode Himasthla elongata, and if experienced mussels change their parasite-avoidance behaviour accordingly. Our results show that previous experience with parasites, but not established infections, lead to a reduced filtration activity in mussels in the presence of cercariae compared to parasite-naive conspecifics. This reduction in filtration activity resulted in lower infection rates in mussels. Since parasite avoidance comes at the cost of lower feeding rates, mussels likely benefit from the ability to adjust their defence behaviour when infection risks are high. Overall, these dynamic processes of avoidance behaviour can be expected to play a significant role in regulating the bivalves' ecosystem engineering function in coastal habitats.

2.
Trends Parasitol ; 38(2): 109-111, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34863638

ABSTRACT

The One Health framework emphasizes the interconnectedness of humans, animals, and the environment but often remains focused on human health. Here we highlight how the evolutionary and ecological dynamics of aquatic parasites are crucial to our understanding of these connected health aspects, especially in the light of environmental changes.


Subject(s)
One Health , Parasites , Animals , Biological Evolution , Ecology , Ecosystem
4.
Int J Parasitol ; 50(14): 1189-1194, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32866489

ABSTRACT

Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) are important ecosystem engineers along Atlantic coastlines, where they are regularly subjected to rapid changes in temperature during the transition between tides. Global climate change and more frequent extreme weather events are expected to intensify this thermal stress even further. These increases in temperatures will not only affect intertidal mussels directly but also increase transmission dynamics of their parasites. Together, the effects of rises in temperature and parasitism will likely result in higher pressure on M. edulis and their ability to perform vital ecosystem services. In a set of experiments, we tested the effects of infections with the trematode Himasthla elongata and high temperatures during low tide air-exposure. Overall, we hypothesised that temperature and parasite infection intensity would each have significant negative effects on M. edulis survival, and that both stressors together would have a synergistic detrimental impact. Overall, high temperature levels had a strong negative effect on mussel survival. However, our results revealed a surprisingly more complex picture in infected individuals. While moderate parasite loads and increased temperature showed additive negative effects on mussel survival, high parasite infection intensities appeared to nullify the detrimental effects of temperature stress on mussels. Under climate warming, these benefits of parasites might actually outweigh the costs of infection and prove beneficial. Overall, these results suggest that the interactions between host-parasite systems and their changing environment are much more complex than a simple additive effect of multiple stressors.


Subject(s)
Heat-Shock Response , Mytilus edulis/parasitology , Temperature , Trematode Infections , Animals , Climate Change , Ecosystem , Trematode Infections/veterinary
5.
Dis Aquat Organ ; 131(3): 199-211, 2018 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30459292

ABSTRACT

The ecologically important shore crab Carcinus maenas is commonly infected in its native range by the rhizocephalan Sacculina carcini. However, several aspects of this host-parasite interaction are poorly understood. Here, we analyse data from approximately 60000 Danish crabs to unravel factors governing infection patterns in time and space, and according to host sex and size. Female crabs were more frequently infected (12.6%) than males (7.9%). Sites with high salinity supported the highest infection prevalence. Infection prevalence peaked in summer (10 to 15%) and winter (20 to 35%) due in part to emergence of virginal externae in summer (main outbreak) and autumn (minor outbreak) preceded by peaks in crabs with lost externa (scars). Younger externae and scars dominated among males, whereas adult externae were most frequent among females. Infection prevalence increased with size in females but decreased in males, and modified (feminized) males showed lower scar frequency than unmodified ones. Modified males occurred frequently among the smaller size classes, whereas unmodified males dominated the larger size classes. Externa size was positively related to host size in both genders (same linear relationship). Molecular analyses suggested that hosts below 16 mm in carapace width do not become infected. Dissections of infected hosts revealed marked reduction of ovaries, whereas testes were unaffected by sacculinization. Our study demonstrates great spatio-temporal variation in infection prevalence mainly related to the parasite's life history. S. carcini appears capable of infecting all host sizes except the smallest. Owing to incomplete feminization of males, infections are rapidly lost from the larger and highly profitable male hosts.


Subject(s)
Brachyura , Animals , Female , Host-Parasite Interactions , Male , Population Dynamics
6.
Glob Chang Biol ; 24(9): 4340-4356, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29768693

ABSTRACT

Mounting evidence suggests that the transmission of certain parasites is facilitated by increasing temperatures, causing their host population to decline. However, no study has yet addressed how temperature and parasitism may combine to shape the functional structure of a whole host community in the face of global warming. Here, we apply an outdoor mesocosm approach supported by field surveys to elucidate this question in a diverse intertidal community of amphipods infected by the pathogenic microphallid trematode, Maritrema novaezealandensis. Under present temperature (17°C) and level of parasitism, the parasite had little impact on the host community. However, elevating the temperature to 21°C in the presence of parasites induced massive structural changes: amphipod abundances decreased species-specifically, affecting epibenthic species but leaving infaunal species largely untouched. In effect, species diversity dropped significantly. In contrast, four degree higher temperatures in the absence of parasitism had limited influence on the amphipod community. Further elevating temperatures (19-25°C) and parasitism, simulating a prolonged heat-wave scenario, resulted in an almost complete parasite-induced extermination of the amphipod community at 25°C. In addition, at 19°C, just two degrees above the present average, a similar temperature-parasite synergistic impact on community structure emerged as seen at 21°C under lower parasite pressure. The heat-wave temperature of 25°C per se affected the amphipod community in a comparable way: species diversity declined and the infaunal species were favoured at the expense of epibenthic species. Our experimental findings are corroborated by field data demonstrating a strong negative relationship between current amphipod species richness and the level of Maritrema parasitism across 12 sites. Hence, owing to the synergistic impact of temperature and parasitism, our study predicts that coastal amphipod communities will deteriorate in terms of abundance and diversity in face of anticipated global warming, functionally changing them to be dominated by infaunal species.


Subject(s)
Amphipoda/parasitology , Global Warming , Host-Parasite Interactions , Hot Temperature , Snails/parasitology , Trematoda/physiology , Animals , Species Specificity
7.
Parasitology ; 144(11): 1530-1542, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28653596

ABSTRACT

Parasites competing over limited host resources are faced with a tradeoff between reproductive success and host overexploitation jeopardizing survival. Surprisingly little is known about the outcome of such competitive scenarios, and we therefore aimed at elucidating interactions between the trematodes Himasthla elongata and Renicola roscovita coinfecting the periwinkle first intermediate host. The results show that the success of Himasthla colonies (rediae) in terms of cercarial emission is unaffected by Renicola competition (sporocysts), whereas deteriating host condition decreases fitness. Furthermore, double infection has no bearing on Himasthla's colony size but elevated the proportion of non-reproductive rediae that play a decisive role in colony defence. Opposite, the development of the Renicola colony (size/maturity), and in turn fitness, is markedly reduced in presence of Himasthla, whereas the nutritional state of the host appears less important. Hence, the intramolluscan competition between Himasthla and Renicola is asymmetrical, Himasthla being the superior competitor. Himasthla not only adjusts its virulence according to the hosts immediate nutritional state, it also nullifies the negative impact of a heterospecific competitor on own fitness. The latter is argued to follow in part from direct predation on the competitor, for which purpose more defensive non-reproductive rediae are strategically produced.


Subject(s)
Host-Parasite Interactions , Snails/parasitology , Trematoda/physiology , Animals , Cercaria/genetics , Cercaria/physiology , Genetic Fitness , Parasites , Trematoda/genetics
8.
PLoS Biol ; 11(6): e1001579, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23776404

ABSTRACT

Comparative research on food web structure has revealed generalities in trophic organization, produced simple models, and allowed assessment of robustness to species loss. These studies have mostly focused on free-living species. Recent research has suggested that inclusion of parasites alters structure. We assess whether such changes in network structure result from unique roles and traits of parasites or from changes to diversity and complexity. We analyzed seven highly resolved food webs that include metazoan parasite data. Our analyses show that adding parasites usually increases link density and connectance (simple measures of complexity), particularly when including concomitant links (links from predators to parasites of their prey). However, we clarify prior claims that parasites "dominate" food web links. Although parasites can be involved in a majority of links, in most cases classic predation links outnumber classic parasitism links. Regarding network structure, observed changes in degree distributions, 14 commonly studied metrics, and link probabilities are consistent with scale-dependent changes in structure associated with changes in diversity and complexity. Parasite and free-living species thus have similar effects on these aspects of structure. However, two changes point to unique roles of parasites. First, adding parasites and concomitant links strongly alters the frequency of most motifs of interactions among three taxa, reflecting parasites' roles as resources for predators of their hosts, driven by trophic intimacy with their hosts. Second, compared to free-living consumers, many parasites' feeding niches appear broader and less contiguous, which may reflect complex life cycles and small body sizes. This study provides new insights about generic versus unique impacts of parasites on food web structure, extends the generality of food web theory, gives a more rigorous framework for assessing the impact of any species on trophic organization, identifies limitations of current food web models, and provides direction for future structural and dynamical models.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Food Chain , Parasites/physiology , Animals , Linear Models , Models, Biological , Probability , Species Specificity
9.
Parasitology ; 138(11): 1436-41, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21810303

ABSTRACT

Parasitism is believed to play an important role in maintaining species diversity, for instance by facilitating coexistence between competing host species. However, the possibility that environmental factors may govern the outcome of parasite-mediated competition has rarely been considered. The closely related amphipods Corophium volutator and Corophium arenarium both serve as second intermediate host for detrimental trematodes. Corophium volutator is the superior competitor of the two, but also suffers from higher mortality when exposed to infective trematode stages. Here, we report parasite-mediated competitive release of C. arenarium in an intertidal habitat, in part triggered by unusually high temperatures linked to the North Atlantic climate oscillation (NAO). The elevated temperatures accelerated the transmission of cercariae from sympatric first intermediate hosts (mud snails) to amphipods, causing a local collapse of the parasite-sensitive C. volutator population and concordant increase in the abundance of the competitively inferior C. arenarium.


Subject(s)
Amphipoda , Cercaria/physiology , Snails/parasitology , Trematoda/physiology , Trematode Infections/transmission , Amphipoda/parasitology , Amphipoda/physiology , Animals , Climate , Climate Change , Competitive Behavior , Denmark , Ecosystem , Host-Parasite Interactions , Population Dynamics , Trematode Infections/parasitology
10.
Parasitol Int ; 55(3): 163-7, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16584913

ABSTRACT

A new 23-collar-spined cercaria and metacercaria are described from intertidal molluscs of the coast of New Zealand. The new cercaria found emerging from the mud snails Zeacumantus subcarinatus (Sowerby) (Prosobranchia: Batillariidae) is characterized mainly by the number and arrangement of the cephalic glands, the size of the suckers, and the size and number of the collar spines. The cercaria encysts in the cockle Austrovenus stutchburyi (Wood) (Bivalvia: Veneridae) which lives in sympatry with the first intermediate host throughout New Zealand. Laboratory infections of cockles by cercariae from naturally infected snails resulted in metacercariae identical to those found in naturally infected cockles. The main features of the cercaria and metacercaria are the presence of a reniform collar with 23 spines, two pairs of small cephalic glands at the oral sucker level, another two pairs of much longer ones posterior to the pharynx, and the excretory vesicle Y-shaped with the main collecting canals extending to the anterior level of the ventral sucker. Each of the main collecting canals had 10-11 pairs of bilateral diverticula between the anterior edge of the ventral sucker and anterior body end. A brief discussion of its possible life cycle and ecology is also provided.


Subject(s)
Cardiidae/parasitology , Echinostomatidae/classification , Echinostomatidae/growth & development , Snails/parasitology , Animals , Echinostomatidae/anatomy & histology , Echinostomatidae/isolation & purification , Ecosystem , Host-Parasite Interactions , Larva/anatomy & histology , Life Cycle Stages , New Zealand
11.
Oecologia ; 146(3): 476-83, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16133194

ABSTRACT

Besides the direct impact on the general performance of individual organisms, the ecological consequences of climate change in terrestrial and marine ecosystems are expected to be determined by complex cascading effects arising from modified trophic interactions and competitive relationships. Recently, the synergistic effect of parasitism and climate change has been emphasised as potentially important to host population dynamics and community structure, but robust empirical evidence is generally lacking. The amphipod Corophium volutator is an ecologically important species in coastal soft-bottom habitats of the temperate North Atlantic, and commonly serves as host to microphallid trematodes that cause intensity-dependent and temperature-dependent mortality in the amphipod population. Using a simulation model parameterised with experimental and field data, we demonstrate that a 3.8 degrees C increase in ambient temperature will likely result in a parasite-induced collapse of the amphipod population. This temperature increase is well within the range predicted to prevail by the year 2075 in the International Wadden Sea region from where the model data are obtained. Due to the amphipods' ecological importance, their population decline may impact the coastal ecosystem as a whole.


Subject(s)
Amphipoda/physiology , Amphipoda/parasitology , Greenhouse Effect , Parasites/physiology , Animals , Computer Simulation , Helminths/physiology , Host-Parasite Interactions , Models, Biological , Oceans and Seas , Population Dynamics , Temperature
12.
J Parasitol ; 90(2): 272-7, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15165049

ABSTRACT

Maritrema novaezealandensis n. sp. is described from Otago Harbor, South Island, New Zealand, on the basis of adult specimens collected from the Red-billed gull, Larus novaehollandiae scopulinus, and excysted metacercariae obtained from crabs. It belongs to the "eroliae group" and differs from other related species mainly in the shape, size, and patterns of distributions of the spines on the cirrus, the shape of the metraterm, the presence of an unlobed ovary, and the complete ring of the vitelline follicles. Based on morphometric features of metacercariae and adult specimens, the trophic relationships among invertebrate and vertebrate hosts, experimental infections, and previous reports of species of Maritrema with similar transmission patterns, the life cycle of M. novaezealandensis n. sp. is described. A 3-host life cycle is proposed for this parasite. The first intermediate host is the mud snail, Zeacumantus subcarinatus, in which the cercarial stage is produced in sporocysts located within the gonad of the snail. At least 3 crab species (Hemigrapsus crenulatus, Macrophtalmus hirtipes, and Halicarcinus whitei) and several species of amphipods act as second intermediate hosts, with metacercariae encysted in the body cavity of the crustacean host. Finally, the definitive host, the gull, L. n. scopulinus, harbors the adult worms in its intestine.


Subject(s)
Bird Diseases/parasitology , Life Cycle Stages , Trematoda/growth & development , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Amphipoda/parasitology , Animals , Bird Diseases/transmission , Birds , Brachyura/parasitology , Snails/parasitology , Trematoda/anatomy & histology , Trematoda/classification , Trematode Infections/parasitology , Trematode Infections/transmission
13.
Int J Parasitol ; 33(10): 1043-50, 2003 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-13129526

ABSTRACT

Parasites with complex life cycles, relying on trophic transmission to a definitive host, very often induce changes in the behaviour or appearance of their intermediate hosts. Because this usually makes the intermediate host vulnerable to predation by the definitive host, it is generally assumed that the parasite's transmission rate is increased, and that the modification of the host is, therefore, of great adaptive significance to the parasite. However, in the ecological "real world" other predators unsuitable as hosts may just as well take advantage of the facilitation process and significantly erode the benefit of host manipulation. Here we show that the intertidal New Zealand cockle (Austrovenus stutchburyi), manipulated by its echinostome trematode (Curtuteria australis) to rest on the sediment surface fully exposed to predation from the avian definitive host, is also subject to sublethal predation from a benthic feeding fish (Notolabrus celidotus, Labridae). The fish is targeting only the cockle-foot, in which the parasite preferentially encysts, reducing the infection intensity of manipulated cockles to levels comparable with those in non-manipulated, buried cockles. Based on the frequency and intensity of the foot cropping and predation rates on surfaced cockles by avian hosts, it is estimated that 2.5% of the parasite population in manipulated cockles is transmitted successfully whereas 17.1% is lost to fish. We argue that the adaptive significance of manipulation in the present system depends critically on the feeding behaviour of the definitive host. If cockles constitute the majority of prey items, there will be selection against manipulation. If manipulated cockles are taken as an easily accessible supplement to a diet composed mostly of other prey organisms, behavioural manipulation of the cockle host appears a high risk, high profit transmission strategy. Both these feeding behaviours of birds are known to occur in the field.


Subject(s)
Echinostoma/physiology , Echinostomiasis/transmission , Echinostomiasis/veterinary , Mollusca/parasitology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Echinostoma/isolation & purification , Echinostomiasis/pathology , Ecosystem , Host-Parasite Interactions , Predatory Behavior
14.
Oecologia ; 135(1): 131-7, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12647112

ABSTRACT

The intertidal cockle Austrovenus stutchburyi exists in a symbiotic relationship with the mud flat anemone Anthopleura aureoradiata, the latter using the shell of buried cockles as the only available hard substrate for attachment. The cockles are also host to a detrimental larval trematode Curtuteria australis that invades the bivalves through the filtration current, and here we demonstrate that the anemones significantly depress the rate by which cockles accumulate parasites in the field. Along the tidal gradient, the relative parasite load of cockles was lowest where anemones were most abundant, and the area occupied by anemones per square meter sediment surface explained 30% of the spatial variation in infection intensity. At a smaller spatial scale, parasite loads were significantly lower (34%) in cockles from patches with than without anemones at the same tidal height. A field experiment manipulating the density of anemones showed that the rate of parasite accumulation in cockles decreased with increasing anemone density, and that the generally positive relationship between infection intensity and cockle size tended to disappear in the presence of anemones. The results suggest that the anemone-cockle symbiosis is a non-obligate mutualistic relationship in which the former is provided with a suitable substrate for attachment whereas the latter obtains protection against parasitic infections.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological , Anemone , Host-Parasite Interactions , Mollusca/parasitology , Symbiosis , Animals , Body Constitution , Geologic Sediments , Mollusca/physiology , Population Dynamics , Trematoda/pathogenicity
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