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Article

Do parasites adopt different strategies in different intermediate hosts? Host size, not host species, influencesCoitocaecum parvum(Trematoda) life history strategy, size and egg production

Details

Citation

RUIZ DANIELS R, BELTRAN S, POULIN R & LAGRUE C (2013) Do parasites adopt different strategies in different intermediate hosts? Host size, not host species, influencesCoitocaecum parvum(Trematoda) life history strategy, size and egg production. Parasitology, 140 (2), pp. 275-283. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182012001564

Abstract
Host exploitation induces host defence responses and competition between parasites, resulting in individual parasites facing highly variable environments. Alternative life strategies may thus be expressed in context-dependent ways, depending on which host species is used and intra-host competition between parasites. Coitocaecum parvum (Trematode) can use facultative progenesis in amphipod intermediate hosts, Paracalliope fluviatilis, to abbreviate its life cycle in response to such environmental factors. Coitocaecum parvum also uses another amphipod host, Paracorophium excavatum, a species widely different in size and ecology from P. fluviatilis. In this study, parasite infection levels and strategies in the two amphipod species were compared to determine whether the adoption of progenesis by C. parvum varied between these two hosts. Potential differences in size and/or egg production between C. parvum individuals according to amphipod host species were also investigated. Results show that C. parvum life strategy was not influenced by host species. In contrast, host size significantly affected C. parvum strategy, size and egg production. Since intra-host interactions between co-infecting parasites also influenced C. parvum strategy, size and fecundity, it is highly likely that within-host resource limitations affect C. parvum life strategy and overall fitness regardless of host species.

Keywords
life cycle abbreviation; intermediate hosts; Coitocaecum parvum; Paracalliope fluviatillis; Paracorophium excavatum

Journal
Parasitology: Volume 140, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date28/02/2013
Publication date online15/10/2012
Date accepted by journal23/02/2014
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN0031-1820
eISSN1469-8161

People (1)

Dr Rose Ruiz Daniels

Dr Rose Ruiz Daniels

Lecturer in Aquaculture Genomics, Institute of Aquaculture