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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental Demonstration of the Energetic Cost of Parasitism in Free-Ranging Hosts

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TLDR
The results demonstrate that even classically ‘benign’ parasites such as feather lice can reduce host condition through the accumulation of subtle energetic costs over time, and argues that experimental manipulations are a prerequisite for documenting such effects.
Abstract
Although some parasites have obvious pathogenic effects, others appear to have subtle, indirect effects that are poorly understood, particularly in natural populations. Indirect effects may result from parasites altering host metabolic rate and hence host energy needs, yet no experimental studies have shown this to be the case for non-laboratory hosts. We report the results of a long-term field experiment designed to test the impact of parasites on host energetics. We measured the energetics of feral rock doves (Columba livia) with populations of feather-feeding lice, traditionally considered to have little or no effect on host fitness. The lice reduced feather mass leading to increased thermal conductance and metabolic rate, as well as a steady reduction in host body mass over the course of the nine-month study. Our results demonstrate that even classically `benign' parasites such as feather lice can reduce host condition through the accumulation of subtle energetic costs over time. We argue that experimental manipulations are a prerequisite for documenting such effects.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive changes in the behaviour of parasitized animals : a critical review

TL;DR: A survey of published examples of host behavioural changes indicates that while some are spectacularly complex and are extremely well-fitted to their presumed function, most are simple increases or decreases in an activity performed prior to infection.
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Critical evaluation of five methods for quantifying chewing lice (Insecta: Phthiraptera).

TL;DR: Visual examination, the only method not requiring that lice be removed from the host, was an accurate predictor of louse abundance, except in the case of wing lice on lightly parasitized birds.
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How Birds Combat Ectoparasites

TL;DR: The evidence - or lack thereof - for many of the purported mechanisms birds have for dealing with ectoparasites are reviewed, focusing on features of the plumage and its components, as well as anti-parasite behaviors.
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Ectoparasite virulence is linked to mode of transmission

TL;DR: Compared the virulence of lice and mites infesting a single group of captive rock doves, results support the hypothesis that ectoparasite virulence is linked to the mode of transmission.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reciprocal Natural Selection on Host‐Parasite Phenotypes

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that preening with a normal bill selects for small body size in lice, which may facilitate their escape from preening, which is a crucial element of coevolutionary theory.
References
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Book

Animal Physiology: Adaptation and Environment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the physiological properties of the human body, including Oxygen, Respiration, Food and Energy, Water and osmotic regulation, control and integration, and Hormone control.
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Measurement of VO2, VCO2, and evaporative water loss with a flow-through mask

TL;DR: Data collected for hummingbirds and monitor lizards indicate the validity of the technics described for the measurement of RQ and evaporative water loss and demonstrate the use of paramagnetic gas analyzers in monitoring respiratory patterns.
Book

The ecology of ectoparasitic insects.

TL;DR: This book is the first to examine comprehensively the ecology of ectoparasitic insects and admits for review any group of organisms whose members follow the parasitic mode of life, emphasizing areas of parasitology which have advanced significantly at the time of publication.
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Processes influencing the distribution of parasite numbers within host populations with special emphasis on parasite-induced host mortalities

TL;DR: It is shown that, for certain types of host-parasite associations, convex curves of mean parasite abundance in relation to age (age-intensity curves), concomitant with a decline in the degree of dispersion in the older age, classes of hosts, may be evidence of the induction in host mortality by parasite infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

The energetic cost of display in male sage grouse

TL;DR: The energetic expenditure of displaying male sage grouse was measured for 18 individuals in the field using the doubly labelled water technique and neither blood parasites nor the potential effects of other diseases as determined by haematocrit levels were associated with display effort.