Wounded but unstressed: Moose tolerate injurious flies in the boreal forest

Author:

Benedict Bridgett M1ORCID,Thompson Daniel P2ORCID,Crouse John A2,Hamer Gabriel L3,Barboza Perry S14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX 77843 , United States

2. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Kenai Moose Research Center , Soldotna, AK 99669 , United States

3. Department of Entomology, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX 77843 , United States

4. Department of Rangelands Wildlife and Fisheries Management, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX 77843 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Moose (Alces alces) in boreal habitats feed and rest where they are exposed to Dipteran flies and the parasites they carry. We collected 31,905 flies during the summer from 12 habituated moose on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. Moose flies, Haematobosca alcis (Snow), Diptera: Muscidae—a species that completes its entire life cycle on or around moose—accounted for 91% of flies collected; the reminder of the flies collected included mosquitoes (Culicidae), black flies (Simuliidae), and deer flies (Tabanidae). Flies impose physiological costs for moose, e.g., vectors for parasites such as Legworm (Onchocerca spp.) which causes sores on the hind legs of moose. We found that the number of sores present on the hind legs of moose is positively correlated with body fat, which suggests a correlation between gains of energy and damage from flies. We also found that the number of sores is negatively correlated with serum albumin, which is indicative of an inflammatory response and body protein being used to repair injuries from flies and parasites. The number or type of flies present on a Moose were not correlated with the concentration of corticosteroids in saliva or feces. Flies do not elicit a stress response in moose even though the costs of repairing wounds and resisting infections of those wounds likely reduce gains of protein from summer foraging. Moose can tolerate the injuries from biting flies with regular gains from summer foraging but exposure to insect-borne parasites poses a risk to reproduction and survival.

Funder

Alaska Department of Fish & Game

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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