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Sexual selection and the geography of Plasmodium infection in Savannah sparrows (Passerculus sandwichensis)

机译:大草原麻雀(Passerculus sandwichensis)的性别选择和疟原虫感染的地理

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摘要

According to Hamilton and Zuk's hypothesis of parasite-mediated sexual selection, host-parasite coevolution maintains variation in male genetic quality and allows for strong intersexual selection in species with high rates of infection. In birds, most interspecific tests of this hypothesis relate the prevalence of blood parasites to some measure of the intensity of sexual selection. Such tests often rely on limited sampling of single populations to estimate species-wide infection rates, and many tests are thus vulnerable to intraspecific (geographic) variation in the evolutionary ecology of disease. Here, we used molecular techniques to examine variation in the prevalence of Plasmodium spp. across 14 populations of Savannah sparrows, Passerculus sandwichensis, in eastern North America. Plasmodium could not be detected in any of 68 island birds, but 34 of 119 (29%) mainland males, and 7 of 43 (16%) mainland females were infected. Among mainland birds, infection was common in southern populations but rare in New Brunswick, Canada. Overall, the prevalence of Plasmodium ranged from 0 to 60% across populations, although only 17.8% of birds were infected in the pooled (species-wide) sample. The extent of this geographic variation suggests that limited sampling of single populations is unlikely to yield accurate estimates of species-wide infection rates. However, among mainland Savannah sparrows, the prevalence of malaria correlated strongly with average male size and the degree of sexual size dimorphism. We speculate that either sexual selection leads to male-biased infection or, conversely, that high rates of infection promote the evolution of strong intersexual selection.
机译:根据汉密尔顿和祖克关于寄生虫介导的性选择的假说,宿主-寄生虫的共进化维持了男性遗传质量的变异,并允许在感染率高的物种中进行强烈的两性选择。在鸟类中,对该假设的大多数种间检验都将血液寄生虫的患病率与性选择强度的某种度量联系起来。这样的测试通常依靠对单个种群的有限采样来估计全物种的感染率,因此许多测试很容易受到疾病进化生态学中种内(地理)变化的影响。在这里,我们使用分子技术检查了疟原虫的流行程度。在北美东部的14个大草原麻雀(Passerculus sandwichensis)种群中。在68只岛屿鸟类中没有检测到疟原虫,但是119只大陆雄性中有34只(29%),以及43只大陆雌性中的7只(16%)被感染。在大陆鸟类中,感染在南方人群中很常见,而在加拿大新不伦瑞克省则很少。总体而言,疟原虫在人群中的流行范围为0%至60%,尽管在合并样本(全物种)中仅感染了17.8%的鸟类。这种地理差异的程度表明,对单个种群进行有限的采样不可能对全物种感染率产生准确的估计。然而,在大陆的萨凡纳麻雀中,疟疾的流行与平均男性大小和性大小二态性程度密切相关。我们推测性选择会导致男性偏向感染,或者相反,高感染率会促进强烈的性选择。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Oecologia》 |2001年第4期|517-521|共5页
  • 作者

  • 作者单位

    Department of Biology Skidmore College Saratoga Springs NY 12866 USA;

    Department of Biology Skidmore College Saratoga Springs NY 12866 USA;

    Department of Biology Skidmore College Saratoga Springs NY 12866 USA;

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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

    Sexual selection Comparative studies Malaria Geographic variation Parasites;

    机译:性别选择比较研究疟疾地理变异寄生虫;

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