Increased parasite load is associated with reduced metabolic rates and escape responsiveness in pumpkinseed sunfish

Author:

Guitard Joëlle J.123ORCID,Chrétien Emmanuelle124ORCID,De Bonville Jérémy12ORCID,Roche Dominique G.56ORCID,Boisclair Daniel12ORCID,Binning Sandra A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Groupe de recherche interuniversitaire en limnologie et en environnement aquatique (GRIL) 1 , Département de sciences biologiques , , 1375 Av. Thérèse- Lavoie-Roux, Montréal, QC , Canada , H2V 0B3

2. Université de Montréal 1 , Département de sciences biologiques , , 1375 Av. Thérèse- Lavoie-Roux, Montréal, QC , Canada , H2V 0B3

3. Institut des sciences de la mer (ISMER), Université de Québec à Rimouski 2 , 310 avenue des Ursulines, Rimouski, QC , Canada , G5L 2Z9

4. Centre eau, terre et environnement, Institut national de la recherche scientifique 3 , Québec City, QC , Canada , G1K 9A9

5. Institut de biologie, Université de Neuchâtel 4 , 2000 Neuchâtel , Switzerland

6. Department of Biology and Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Sciences, Carleton University 5 , Ottawa, ON , Canada , K1S 5B6

Abstract

ABSTRACT Wild animals have parasites that can compromise their physiological and/or behavioural performance. Yet, the extent to which parasite load is related to intraspecific variation in performance traits within wild populations remains relatively unexplored. We used pumpkinseed sunfish (Lepomis gibbosus) and their endoparasites as a model system to explore the effects of infection load on host aerobic metabolism and escape performance. Metabolic traits (standard and maximum metabolic rates, aerobic scope) and fast-start escape responses following a simulated aerial attack by a predator (responsiveness, response latency and escape distance) were measured in fish from across a gradient of visible (i.e. trematodes causing black spot disease counted on fish surfaces) and non-visible (i.e. cestodes in fish abdominal cavity counted post-mortem) endoparasite infection. We found that a higher infection load of non-visible endoparasites was related to lower standard and maximum metabolic rates, but not aerobic scope in fish. Non-visible endoparasite infection load was also related to decreased responsiveness of the host to a simulated aerial attack. Visible endoparasites were not related to changes in metabolic traits or fast-start escape responses. Our results suggest that infection with parasites that are inconspicuous to researchers can result in intraspecific variation in physiological and behavioural performance in wild populations, highlighting the need to more explicitly acknowledge and account for the role played by natural infections in studies of wild animal performance.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canada Research Chair

Université de Montréal

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference103 articles.

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