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High rates of infection by blood parasites during the nestling phase in UK Columbids with notes on ecological associations

Version 4 2024-03-12, 14:57
Version 3 2023-10-29, 11:23
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 14:57 authored by Jenny Dunn, Jennifer E. Stockdale, Emma L. Bradford, Alexandra McCubbin, Antony J. Morris, Philip V. Grice, Simon J. Goodman, Keith C. Hamer
<p>Studies of blood parasite infection in nestling birds rarely find a high prevalence of infection. This is likely due to a combination of short nestling periods (limiting the age at which nestlings can be sampled) and long parasite prepatent periods before gametocytes can be detected in peripheral blood. Here we examine rates of blood parasite infection in nestlings from three Columbid species in the UK. We use this system to address two key hypotheses in the epidemiology of avian haemoparasites: first, that nestlings in open nests have a higher prevalence of infection; and second, that nestlings sampled at 14 days old have a higher apparent infection rate than those sampled at 7 days old. Open-nesting individuals had a 54% infection rate compared with 25% for box-nesters, probably due to an increased exposure of open-nesting species to dipteran vectors. Nestlings sampled at 14 days had a 68% infection rate compared with 32% in nestlings sampled at 7 days, suggesting that rates of infection in the nest are high. Further work should examine nestlings post-fledging to identify rates of successful parasite infection (as opposed to abortive development within a dead-end host) as well as impacts on host post-fledging survival and behaviour</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Parasitology

Volume

144

Issue

5

Pages/Article Number

622-628

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

ISSN

0031-1820

eISSN

1469-8161

Date Submitted

2016-12-21

Date Accepted

2013-11-03

Date of First Publication

2016-12-12

Date of Final Publication

2017-04-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2016-12-15

ePrints ID

25385

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