HORIZONTAL TRANSMISSION AND REPRODUCTIVE RATES OF HEN FLEAS IN GREAT TIT NESTS

Citation
P. Heeb et al., HORIZONTAL TRANSMISSION AND REPRODUCTIVE RATES OF HEN FLEAS IN GREAT TIT NESTS, Journal of Animal Ecology, 65(4), 1996, pp. 474-484
Citations number
59
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218790
Volume
65
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
474 - 484
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8790(1996)65:4<474:HTARRO>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
1. The transmission mode and reproductive rates of a parasite are usua lly associated with its virulence. In this study, two experiments were carried out to quantify horizontal transmission rates and reproductiv e dynamics of hen fleas infesting a population of great tits. Our resu lts provide experimental data on certain factors affecting the populat ion dynamics of an ectoparasite in a host population. 2. Immigration o f adult hen fleas occurred in 72% (29 out of 40) of previously deparas itized great tit nests. The mean infestation intensity was 5.8 adult f leas per nest and did not vary seasonally. Adult hen flea distribution within the host population was aggregated and did not differ from a n egative binomial distribution. 3. In nests experimentally infested wit h 40 adult fleas, two discrete flea cohorts were found at the end of t he hosts' breeding attempts. The first cohort consisted of adult fleas , the second cohort was much larger and consisted of second and third instar larvae. No first instar larvae were observed in the second coho rt. A small proportion of larvae was found in cocoons. 4. The day in t he season and the daily mean temperatures during the birds' 'brooding period' (i.e. from the start of incubation until the last young fledge d or died) were not significantly correlated with the number of fleas in the nests. These results suggest that climatic and seasonal factors do not have significant effects on flea reproduction. 5. The number o f adult fleas and larvae was not significantly different between nests where all chicks died and nests where at least one young P, Cged. Hos t reproductive success affected the number and proportion of larvae in cocoons which was lower in nests of birds that failed compared with n ests of birds that fledged young. The proportion of larvae in cocoons increased with the number of days in the 'brooding period' of the bird s. 6. Among infested nests, the number of adult fleas and the total nu mber of larvae were positively correlated with the fresh mass of the n ests, suggesting that density-dependent mechanisms within nests affect flea numbers. Great tits appeared to increase the mass of their nests following experimental infestations with hen fleas. 7. In nests of bi rds that fledged at least one young, the number of adult fleas and lar vae was not significantly correlated with measures of the hosts' breed ing performance (chick mass and number of fledglings). These results s uggest that flea reproductive success does not depend on the hosts' re productive performance. 8. These results emphasize the need to study t he effects of host responses on survival and reproductive rates of par asites, A knowledge of these effects is essential for the understandin g of population dynamics, dispersal and life-history traits of the par asites.