Pre-hatching maternal effects and the tasty chick hypothesis


Autoria(s): Roulin A.; Gasparini J.; Froissart L.
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Question: Are maternal effects (i.e. maternal transfer of immune components to their offspring via the placenta or the egg) specifically directed to the offspring on which ectoparasites predictably aggregate? Organisms: The barn owl (Tyto alba) because late-hatched offspring are the main target of the ectoparasitic fly Carnus hemapterus. Hypothesis: Pre-hatching maternal effects enhance parasite resistance of late- compared with early-hatched nestlings. Search method: To disentangle the effect of natal from rearing ranks on parasite intensity, we exchanged hatchlings between nests to allocate early- and late-hatched hatchlings randomly in the within-brood age hierarchy. Result: After controlling for rearing ranks, cross-fostered late-hatched nestlings were less parasitized but lighter than cross-fostered early-hatched nestlings. Conclusion: Pre-hatching maternal effects increase parasite resistance of late-hatched offspring at a growth cost.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_31DC017F4E97

isbn:1522-0613

isiid:000256015000009

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Evolutionary Ecology Research, vol. 10, no. 3, pp. 463-473

Palavras-Chave #growth; hatching asynchrony; host-parasite interactions; maternal effects; tasty chick hypothesis.
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article