Abstract
AbstractPredators are thought to prey on individuals that are in poor physical condition, although the evidence supporting this is ambiguous. We tested if sick individuals where more predated using Drosophila melanogaster flies as manipulable preys. We asked whether hunting spiders, trapped from the wild, would selectively prey upon flies with compromised health (i.e. chronically infected or cancerous) versus healthy flies under laboratory conditions. Flies chronically infected with the bacterium Providencia rettgeri, a natural Drosophila pathogen, were not selectively preyed upon by jumping spiders. We strengthened and confirmed our finding with another hunting spider species, small wolf spiders. We discuss that this result supports the hypothesis that chronic infection is associated with reduced symptoms notably to avoid the potentially deadly consequences of host predation on pathogens. We then induced colon cancer in some of the flies and asked whether the presence of cancer led to selective predation; there is little evidence for this, even in vertebrates. As the cancer developed, the incidence of predation by jumping spiders on the afflicted flies increased. We conclude that disease can have different lethal consequences through predation, even in invertebrate species, and that cancer is a factor in selective predation. Our results may explain why early tumours, but not metastasized cancers, are commonly detected in organisms in the wild, as cancer bearing individuals are rapidly eliminated due to the strong selective pressure against them.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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