| Literature DB >> 29386365 |
Steffen Hahn1, Silke Bauer2, Dimitar Dimitrov3, Tamara Emmenegger2, Karina Ivanova3, Pavel Zehtindjiev3, William A Buttemer4.
Abstract
Blood parasites (Haemosporidia) are thought to impair the flight performance of infected animals, and therefore, infected birds are expected to differ from their non-infected counterparts in migratory capacity. Since haemosporidians invade host erythrocytes, it is commonly assumed that infected individuals will have compromised aerobic capacity, but this has not been examined in free-living birds. We tested if haemosporidian infections affect aerobic performance by examining metabolic rates and exercise endurance in migratory great reed warblers (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) experimentally treated with Plasmodium relictum pGRW04 and in naturally infected wild birds over consecutive life-history stages. We found no effect of acute or chronic infections on resting metabolic rate, maximum metabolic rate or exercise endurance in either experimentally treated or free-living birds. Oxygen consumption rates during rest and while undergoing maximum exercise as well as exercise endurance increased from breeding to migration stages in both infected and non-infected birds. Importantly, phenotypic changes associated with preparation for migration were similarly unaffected by parasitaemia. Consequently, migratory birds experiencing parasitaemia levels typical of chronic infection do not differ in migratory capacity from their uninfected counterparts. Thus, if infected hosts differ from uninfected conspecifics in migration phenology, other mechanisms besides aerobic capacity should be considered.Entities:
Keywords: avian malaria; disease; metabolic rate; migration; oxygen consumption; pathogen
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29386365 PMCID: PMC5805937 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.2307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Figure 1.Parasitaemia in experimentally treated and naturally infected great reed warblers. (a) Frequency of parasitaemia of the lineage pGRW04 induced in the experimental birds during the acute phase of infection (n = 16) and (b) total frequency of parasitaemia in chronically infected wild birds (n = 61). (c) Genus-specific parasitaemia (medians ± 25/75% and the ranges) in wild birds for Plasmodium ssp. (red, n = 18) and Haemoproteus ssp. (dark grey, n = 40).
Figure 2.Aerobic performance, haemoglobin content, and body mass of experimentally infected and sham-treated (non-infected) great reed warblers during sequential phases of infection with Plasmodium relictum. The aerobic performance is described as oxygen consumption (V̇O2, in ml min−1) during overnight rest (RMR), and during strenuous exercise (MMR), as well as the endurance of exercise period (time until exhaustion, min). Infected individuals during acute and chronic infection phases (early and late post-inoculation) did not differ from the control group, with all birds showing increasing whole-body metabolic rates and haemoglobin concentrations during the course of the experiment. Data are medians ± 25/75%.
Figure 3.Aerobic performance, haemoglobin concentration and body mass of free-living non-infected and chronically infected great reed warblers during sequential stages of the annual cycle. Infected birds were subdivided into low- and high-parasitaemia birds. Infection status had no effect on aerobic performance, haemoglobin content or period of exercise endurance during any stage we sampled. Thus, birds with chronic low and high parasitaemia were as aerobically capable as their non-infected counterparts, even during the migration phase. Data are medians ± 25/75%.