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Threat-sensitive decision-making might be changed in response to a parasitic infection that impairs future reproduction. Infected
animals should take more risk to gain energy to speed up their growth to achieve early reproduction and/or to strengthen their
immune response. To avoid correlational evidence, we experimentally infected and sham-infected randomly selected immature
three-spined sticklebacks with the cestode Schistocephalus solidus. For 7 weeks we determined the threat-sensitive foraging decisions and growth of individual sticklebacks in the presence
of a live pike (Esox lucius). The experimenters were blind with respect to the infection status of the fish. In contrast to previous studies, our recently
infected fish should have been almost unconstrained by the parasite and thus have been able to adopt an appropriate life history
strategy. We found a strong predator effect for both infected and uninfected fish: the sticklebacks’ risk-sensitive foraging
strategy resulted in significantly reduced growth under predation risk. Infected fish did not grow significantly faster under
predation risk than uninfected fish. Since infected fish consumed much less prey in the presence of the predator than did
infected fish in its absence, they obviously did not use the opportunity to maximize their growth rate to reach reproduction
before the parasite impairs it.
Received: 21 June 1999 / Revised: 27 November 1999 / Accepted: 5 September 2000 相似文献
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Aeschlimann P. B. Häberli M. A. Reusch T. B. H. Boehm T. Milinski M. 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2003,54(2):119-126
Theoretical and empirical studies suggest that an optimal resistance to pathogens and parasites requires an optimal number of MHC alleles per individual. Here we argue that three-spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus ) achieve this goal by applying a strategy that involves a self-referential process. According to this model, females complement their own set of alleles with a more or less diverse set of male alleles such that the combined diversity reaches an optimum. In previous experiments, we have identified allele counting as a major mate-choice strategy in large populations. The self-referential allele-counting hypothesis predicts that MHC-based mate choice favors dissimilar MHC alleles in small populations facing the risk of inbreeding. Therefore, we conducted an experiment that simulated a small effective population size with low MHC class-II diversity. Our experiments are based on the analysis of MHC class-IIB alleles that explain a major part of the overall MHC diversity in sticklebacks, as determined by mathematical modeling. The results show that females preferred males with dissimilar alleles. Our present and the previous studies (which we reanalyzed with respect to our new predictions) show that irrespective of high or low population diversity faced by female sticklebacks for their mate choice, they use information about their own and their potential mate's MHC polymorphism for optimal complementation of their own set of alleles. From combining the data of the previous and the present experiment we found that female sticklebacks try to achieve an optimum number of MHC class-IIB alleles for their offspring through mate choice. The chosen MHC diversity is close to the most frequent diversity found naturally in individual fish, which in addition have the lowest parasite burden. 相似文献
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