Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish

Parasites can negatively affect the reproductive success of hosts. Placental species may be particularly susceptible, because parasite-induced stress during pregnancy could potentially influence embryo development. Here we examine the consequences of a trematode infestation (black spot disease, BSD) for fetal development and adult behavior in 19 natural populations of the placental live-bearing fish species Poeciliopsis retropinna (Poeciliidae) in Costa Rica. First, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among populations which correlated with a number of local environmental conditions (elevation, river width, depth, and flow velocity). Furthermore, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among females within populations associated with maternal age and size. We found that the infestation rate significantly influenced embryonic development, with more heavily parasitized females producing smaller and worse-conditioned offspring at birth, possibly because a costly immune response during pregnancy limits, either directly or indirectly, nourishment to developing embryos. Finally, a behavioral experiment in the field showed that the infestation rate did not affect an individual’s boldness. Our study indicates that in placental live-bearing fish parasite infestation leads to reduced embryo provisioning during pregnancy, resulting in a smaller offspring size and quality at birth potentially with negative implications for offspring fitness.

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Main Authors: Hagmayer, Andres, Furness, Andrew I., Pollux, Bart J.A.
Format: Dataset biblioteca
Published: Wageningen University & Research
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/parasite-infestation-influences-life-history-but-not-boldness-beh
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5973422024-09-30 Hagmayer, Andres Furness, Andrew I. Pollux, Bart J.A. Dataset Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish 2020 Parasites can negatively affect the reproductive success of hosts. Placental species may be particularly susceptible, because parasite-induced stress during pregnancy could potentially influence embryo development. Here we examine the consequences of a trematode infestation (black spot disease, BSD) for fetal development and adult behavior in 19 natural populations of the placental live-bearing fish species Poeciliopsis retropinna (Poeciliidae) in Costa Rica. First, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among populations which correlated with a number of local environmental conditions (elevation, river width, depth, and flow velocity). Furthermore, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among females within populations associated with maternal age and size. We found that the infestation rate significantly influenced embryonic development, with more heavily parasitized females producing smaller and worse-conditioned offspring at birth, possibly because a costly immune response during pregnancy limits, either directly or indirectly, nourishment to developing embryos. Finally, a behavioral experiment in the field showed that the infestation rate did not affect an individual’s boldness. Our study indicates that in placental live-bearing fish parasite infestation leads to reduced embryo provisioning during pregnancy, resulting in a smaller offspring size and quality at birth potentially with negative implications for offspring fitness. Parasites can negatively affect the reproductive success of hosts. Placental species may be particularly susceptible, because parasite-induced stress during pregnancy could potentially influence embryo development. Here we examine the consequences of a trematode infestation (black spot disease, BSD) for fetal development and adult behavior in 19 natural populations of the placental live-bearing fish species Poeciliopsis retropinna (Poeciliidae) in Costa Rica. First, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among populations which correlated with a number of local environmental conditions (elevation, river width, depth, and flow velocity). Furthermore, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among females within populations associated with maternal age and size. We found that the infestation rate significantly influenced embryonic development, with more heavily parasitized females producing smaller and worse-conditioned offspring at birth, possibly because a costly immune response during pregnancy limits, either directly or indirectly, nourishment to developing embryos. Finally, a behavioral experiment in the field showed that the infestation rate did not affect an individual’s boldness. Our study indicates that in placental live-bearing fish parasite infestation leads to reduced embryo provisioning during pregnancy, resulting in a smaller offspring size and quality at birth potentially with negative implications for offspring fitness. Wageningen University & Research text/html https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/parasite-infestation-influences-life-history-but-not-boldness-beh 10.5061/dryad.6hdr7sqxr https://edepot.wur.nl/569750 Life Science Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Hagmayer, Andres
Furness, Andrew I.
Pollux, Bart J.A.
Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
description Parasites can negatively affect the reproductive success of hosts. Placental species may be particularly susceptible, because parasite-induced stress during pregnancy could potentially influence embryo development. Here we examine the consequences of a trematode infestation (black spot disease, BSD) for fetal development and adult behavior in 19 natural populations of the placental live-bearing fish species Poeciliopsis retropinna (Poeciliidae) in Costa Rica. First, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among populations which correlated with a number of local environmental conditions (elevation, river width, depth, and flow velocity). Furthermore, we observed substantial variation in parasite infestation among females within populations associated with maternal age and size. We found that the infestation rate significantly influenced embryonic development, with more heavily parasitized females producing smaller and worse-conditioned offspring at birth, possibly because a costly immune response during pregnancy limits, either directly or indirectly, nourishment to developing embryos. Finally, a behavioral experiment in the field showed that the infestation rate did not affect an individual’s boldness. Our study indicates that in placental live-bearing fish parasite infestation leads to reduced embryo provisioning during pregnancy, resulting in a smaller offspring size and quality at birth potentially with negative implications for offspring fitness.
format Dataset
topic_facet Life Science
author Hagmayer, Andres
Furness, Andrew I.
Pollux, Bart J.A.
author_facet Hagmayer, Andres
Furness, Andrew I.
Pollux, Bart J.A.
author_sort Hagmayer, Andres
title Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
title_short Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
title_full Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
title_fullStr Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
title_full_unstemmed Parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
title_sort parasite infestation influences life-history but not boldness behavior in placental live-bearing fish
publisher Wageningen University & Research
url https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/parasite-infestation-influences-life-history-but-not-boldness-beh
work_keys_str_mv AT hagmayerandres parasiteinfestationinfluenceslifehistorybutnotboldnessbehaviorinplacentallivebearingfish
AT furnessandrewi parasiteinfestationinfluenceslifehistorybutnotboldnessbehaviorinplacentallivebearingfish
AT polluxbartja parasiteinfestationinfluenceslifehistorybutnotboldnessbehaviorinplacentallivebearingfish
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