Author:
Prüter Hanna,Franz Mathias,Twietmeyer Sönke,Böhm Niklas,Middendorff Gudrun,Portas Ruben,Melzheimer Jörg,Kolberg Holger,von Samson-Himmelstjerna Georg,Greenwood Alex D.,Lüschow Dörte,Mühldorfer Kristin,Czirják Gábor Árpád
Abstract
AbstractImmunity and parasites have been linked to the success of invasive species. Especially lower parasite burden in invasive populations has been suggested to enable a general downregulation of immune investment (Enemy Release and Evolution of Increased Competitive Ability Hypotheses). Simultaneously, keeping high immune competence towards potentially newly acquired parasites in the invasive range is essential to allow population growth. To investigate the variation of immune effectors of invasive species, we compared the mean and variance of multiple immune effectors in the context of parasite prevalence in an invasive and a native Egyptian goose (Alopochen aegyptiacus) population. Three of ten immune effectors measured showed higher variance in the invasive population. Mean levels were higher in the invasive population for three effectors but lower for eosinophil granulocytes. Parasite prevalence depended on the parasite taxa investigated. We suggest that variation of specific immune effectors, which may be important for invasion success, may lead to higher variance and enable invasive species to reduce the overall physiological cost of immunity while maintaining the ability to efficiently defend against novel parasites encountered.
Funder
Senate Competition Committee grant of the Leibniz Association
Ministry of Rhineland-Palatinate
GRK2046
AquaVir
Projekt DEAL
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
11 articles.
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