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Sociality, exotic ectoparasites, and fitness in the plural breeding rodent Octodon degus
Authors:Joseph R Burger  Adrian S Chesh  Pamela Mu?oz  Fernando Fredes  Luis A Ebensperger  Loren D Hayes
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Monroe, Monroe, LA 71209, USA;(2) Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA;(3) Laboratorio de Parasitolog?a Veterinaria, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias, Universidad Austral, Valdivia, Chile;(4) Departamento de Parasitolog?a, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias y Pecuarias, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile;(5) Centro de Estudios Avanzados en Ecolog?a y Biodiversidad, Departmento de Ecolog?a, Pontificia Universidad Cat?lica de Chile, Santiago, Chile
Abstract:Social animals are susceptible to high infection levels by contact-transmitted parasites due to increased conspecific interaction. Exotic parasites are known to have adverse consequences on native hosts. We examined the relationship between social group size and exotic ectoparasite loads, and adult infection levels with per capita fitness and offspring survival in the plural breeding rodent Octodon degus in central Chile. Degus at our site were almost entirely infected by two exotic ectoparasites: the fleas Leptopsylla segnis and Xenopsylla cheopis. Neither group size nor number of females per group predicted the abundance of either exotic flea species. The per capita number of pups (per capita fitness) that emerged from burrow systems used by known social groups was negatively correlated with abundance of L. segnis but not X. cheopis. On adults, X. cheopis abundance was three times greater than L. segnis but was not significantly correlated with per capita fitness. In females, L. segnis abundance was negatively correlated with peak body mass during pregnancy. Adult ectoparasite load was not correlated with offspring survival. Based on these results, we hypothesize that high infection levels of L. segnis result in decreased reproductive fitness of adult female degus but are not a cost of sociality because parasite loads are not predicted by social group size. Further work is needed to experimentally test this hypothesis and to determine if L. segnis serves as a vector for a deleterious pathogen. Lastly, the lack of native ectoparasites may explain why a previous study at our site determined that behavioral adaptations needed to cope with high ectoparasite burdens (e.g., grooming) are not extensive in degus; they simply have not had the coevolutionary time needed for selection of these behaviors.
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