Reciprocal transplant experiments demonstrate a dynamic coevolutionary relationship between parasitic mussel larvae and bitterling fishes

Author:

Anil Abhishek Nair12,Mehdi Imane13,Douda Karel4,Smith Carl5,Reichard Martin125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Czech Academy of Sciences Brno Czech Republic

2. Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science Masaryk University Brno Czech Republic

3. Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences and Technologies University of Lille Lille France

4. Department of Zoology and Fisheries, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Praha Suchdol Czech Republic

5. Department of Ecology and Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection University of Lodz Lodz Poland

Abstract

Abstract The coevolutionary dynamic of host–parasite associations varies from strictly local adaptations to diffuse guild coevolution. How innate and acquired immune responses modulate host resistance to parasitism and how host specificity and geographic scaling affect the efficacy of host response have consequences for range dynamics and biological invasions. Using reciprocal transplant experiments, we tested whether local or diffuse coevolution shapes host response to parasitism in the host–parasite association between bitterling fishes and larval stages (glochidia) of freshwater mussels from Europe and East Asia. We found that glochidia initially indiscriminately attached to all study host species, but immune responses elicited significant differences in host responses within 24 h of infection, which intensified during glochidial development. European bitterlings were more resistant to European glochidia and Asian bitterlings to Asian glochidia, with the strongest geographic bias in resistance in the Asian bitterling hosts. This finding suggests a strong effect of local adaptation but also indicates the non‐negligible role of coevolutionary hotspots. Low natural glochidia load on bitterling species overall hence arise from competent immune response rather than glochidia avoidance behaviour. Bitterling immune response is primarily innate and not acquired. Overall, our data demonstrate the complex outcome of parasite pressure on the evolution of host resistance, and important role of geographically structured coevolution in shaping host response.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Publisher

Wiley

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