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The Sicker Sex: Understanding Male Biases in Parasitic Infection Resource Allocation and Fitness

机译:邪恶的性别:了解寄生虫感染资源分配和适应性方面的男性偏见

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摘要

The “sicker sex” idea summarizes our knowledge of sex biases in parasite burden and immune ability whereby males fare worse than females. The theoretical basis of this is that because males invest more on mating effort than females, the former pay the costs by having a weaker immune system and thus being more susceptible to parasites. Females, conversely, have a greater parental investment. Here we tested the following: a) whether both sexes differ in their ability to defend against parasites using a natural host-parasite system; b) the differences in resource allocation conflict between mating effort and parental investment traits between sexes; and, c) effect of parasitism on survival for both sexes. We used a number of insect damselfly species as study subjects. For (a), we quantified gregarine and mite parasites, and experimentally manipulated gregarine levels in both sexes during adult ontogeny. For (b), first, we manipulated food during adult ontogeny and recorded thoracic fat gain (a proxy of mating effort) and abdominal weight (a proxy of parental investment) in both sexes. Secondly for (b), we manipulated food and gregarine levels in both sexes when adults were about to become sexually mature, and recorded gregarine number. For (c), we infected male and female adults of different ages and measured their survival. Males consistently showed more parasites than females apparently due to an increased resource allocation to fat production in males. Conversely, females invested more on abdominal weight. These differences were independent of how much food/infecting parasites were provided. The cost of this was that males had more parasites and reduced survival than females. Our results provide a resource allocation mechanism for understanding sexual differences in parasite defense as well as survival consequences for each sex.
机译:“变态的性”观念总结了我们对寄生虫负担和免疫能力方面的性别偏见的认识,从而使男性的状况比女性差。从理论上讲,由于雄性比雌性投入更多的精力,前者通过免疫系统较弱而更容易受到寄生虫的侵害而付出了代价。相反,女性有较大的父母投资。在这里,我们测试了以下内容:a)两种性别在使用天然宿主-寄生虫系统防御寄生虫的能力上是否不同; b)性别之间的交配努力和父母的投资特征之间的资源分配冲突的差异; c)寄生虫对男女生存的影响。我们使用了许多昆虫豆娘作为研究对象。对于(a),我们在成年个体发育过程中定量了牛至和螨虫的寄生虫,并实验性地控制了两性中的牛至水平。对于(b),首先,我们在成年个体发育过程中对食物进行操作,并记录了男女的胸腔脂肪增加(代表交配努力)和腹部重量(代表父母投资)。其次,对于(b),当成年人即将达到性成熟时,我们控制了两个性别的食物和人造黄油的水平,并记录了人造黄油的数量。对于(c),我们感染了不同年龄的成年男性和女性,并测量了其生存率。男性持续显示出比女性更多的寄生虫,这显然是由于男性脂肪生产中增加了资源分配。相反,女性在腹部重量上投入更多。这些差异与提供多少食物/感染性寄生虫无关。这样做的代价是,男性比女性有更多的寄生虫和降低的生存率。我们的结果提供了一种资源分配机制,用于理解寄生虫防御系统中的性别差异以及每种性别的生存后果。

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