首页> 外文期刊>Evolution: International Journal of Organic Evolution >Paternity-parasitism trade-offs: A model and test of host-parasite cooperation in an avian conspecific brood parasite
【24h】

Paternity-parasitism trade-offs: A model and test of host-parasite cooperation in an avian conspecific brood parasite

机译:亲子关系-寄生关系的权衡:禽同种异体亲寄生虫中寄主-寄生虫合作的模型和测试

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
       

摘要

Efforts to evaluate the evolutionary and ecological dynamics of conspecific brood parasitism in birds and other animals have focused on the fitness costs of parasitism to hosts and fitness benefits to parasites. However, it has been speculated recently that, in species with biparental care, host males might cooperate with parasitic females by allowing access to the host nest in exchange for copulations. We develop a cost-benefit model to explore the conditions under which such host-parasite cooperation might occur. When the brood parasite does not have a nest of her own, the only benefit to the host male is siting some of the parasitic eggs (quasi-parasitism). Cooperation with the parasite is favored when the ratio of host male paternity of his own eggs relative to his paternity of parasitic eggs exceeds the cost of parasitism. When the brood parasite has a nest of her own, a host male can gain additional, potentially more important benefits by siring the high-value, low-cost eggs laid by the parasite in her own nest. Under these conditions, host males should be even more likely to accept parasitic eggs in return for copulations with the parasitic female. We tested these predictions for American coots (Fulica americana), a species with a high frequency of conspecific brood parasitism. Multilocus DNA profiling indicated that host males did not sire any of the parasitic eggs laid in host nests, nor did they sire eggs laid by the parasite in her own nest. We used field estimates of the model parameters from a four-year study of coots to predict the minimum levels of paternity required for the costs of parasitism to be offset by the benefits of mating with brood parasites. Observed levels of paternity were significantly lower than those predicted under a variety of assumptions, and we reject the hypothesis that host males cooperated with parasitic females. Our model clarifies the specific costs and benefits that influence host-parasite cooperation and, more generally, yields precise predictions about expected levels of host male paternity. These predictions will enable a more rigorous assessment of field studies designed to test adaptive hypotheses of host-parasite cooperation. [References: 65]
机译:评估鸟类和其他动物中同种异卵寄生的进化和生态动力学的努力集中在寄生对宿主的适应成本和对寄生虫的适应益处。然而,最近推测,在具有双亲照顾的物种中,寄主雄性可能通过允许进入寄主巢以换取交配而与寄生雌性合作。我们开发了一种成本效益模型,以探讨在这种条件下可能发生宿主-寄生虫合作的情况。当繁殖的寄生虫没有自己的巢时,对寄主雄性的唯一好处是可以将一些寄生卵(准寄生)定位。当寄主雄性亲本卵相对于其寄生卵亲本的比率超过寄生虫的代价时,则倾向于与寄生虫合作。当亲虫有自己的巢时,寄主雄性通过将寄生虫产下的高价值,低成本的卵分担在自己的巢中可以获得额外的,可能更重要的好处。在这种情况下,寄主雄性更应该接受寄生卵​​,以换取与雌性雌性的交配。我们针对美国白骨鸡(Fulica americana)(一种具高特定种性寄生率的物种)测试了这些预测。多基因座DNA谱分析表明,寄主雄性没有在寄主巢中产卵任何寄生虫卵,也没有在其自己的巢中使该寄生虫产卵。我们使用了来自对白骨灰的一项为期四年的研究的模型参数的现场估计,以预测寄生虫成本被亲虫寄生所抵消的最低亲子关系水平。观察到的亲子关系水平显着低于在各种假设下预测的亲子关系水平,我们拒绝了寄主雄性与寄生雌性合作的假说。我们的模型阐明了影响寄主-寄生虫合作的具体成本和收益,并且更一般地,得出了有关寄主男性亲子鉴定的预期水平的精确预测。这些预测将使对旨在测试宿主-寄生虫合作的适应性假设的实地研究进行更严格的评估。 [参考:65]

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号