Parasite infection and host dynamics in a naturally fluctuating rodent population
Abstract
Parasites can both influence and be affected by host population dynamics, and a growing number of case studies support a role for parasites in causing or amplifying host population cycles. In this study, we examined individual and population predictors of gastrointestinal parasitism on wild cyclic montane voles ( Microtus montanus (Peale, 1848)) to determine if evidence was consistent with theory implicating parasites in population cycles. We sampled three sites in central Colorado for the duration of a multiannual cycle and recorded the prevalence and intensity of directly transmitted Eimeria Schneider, 1875 and indirectly transmitted cestodes from a total of 267 voles. We found significant associations between host infection status, individual traits (sex, age, and reproductive status) and population variables (site, trapping period, and population density), including a positive association between host density and cestode prevalence, and a negative association between host density and Eimeria prevalence. Both cestode and Eimeria intensity correlated positively with host age, reproductive status, and population density, but neither parasite was associated with poorer host condition. Our findings suggest that parasites are common in this natural host, but determining their potential to influence montane vole cycles requires future experimental studies and long-term monitoring to determine the fitness consequences of infection and the impact of parasite removal on host dynamics.
Local Knowledge Graph (12 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Resource availability and population dynamics of <i>Nicrophorus investigator</i>, an obligate carrion breeder
Foraging behavior of parasitized and non-parasitized voles during new moon and full moon events
Patterns of parasite prevalence and individual infection in yellow-bellied marmots.
Marmot capture history data and growing season length data
Social Behavior and Population Dynamics of Yellow-bellied Marmots
Social Behavior and Population Dynamics of Yellow-bellied Marmots
An Ecological Basis for Beaver Management in the Rocky Mountain Region
Small Mammals: A Beaver Pond Ecosystem and Adjacent Riparian Habitat in Idaho
Small Mammal Survey, Acid Fen, Mt. Emmons Gunnison, Colorado
Cited By (23 times, 1 in Knowledge Hub)
References (97)
1 in Knowledge Hub, 96 external
