Literature DB >> 32936457

Harrison's rule scales up to entire parasite assemblages but is determined by environmental factors.

Renan Maestri1, Maico S Fiedler1, Georgy I Shenbrot2, Elena N Surkova3, Sergei G Medvedev4, Irina S Khokhlova5, Boris R Krasnov2.   

Abstract

Harrison's rule states that parasite body size and the body size of their hosts tend to be positively correlated. After it was proposed a century ago, a number of studies have investigated this trend, but the support level has varied greatly between parasite/host associations. Moreover, while the rule has been tested at the individual species level, we still lack knowledge on whether Harrison's rule holds at the scale of parasite and host communities. Here, we mapped flea (parasites) and rodent (hosts) body sizes across Mongolia and asked whether Harrison's rule holds for parasite/host assemblages (i.e. whether a parasite's average body size in a locality is positively correlated with its host's average body size). In addition, we attempted to disentangle complex relationships between flea size, host size and environmental factors by testing alternative hypotheses for the determinants of fleas' body size variation. We gathered occurrence data for fleas and rodents from 2,370 sites across Mongolia, constructed incidence matrices for both taxa and calculated the average body sizes of fleas and their hosts over half-degree cells. Then, we applied a path analysis, accounting for spatial autocorrelation, trying to disentangle the drivers of the correlation between parasite and host body sizes. We found a strong positive correlation between average flea and host size across assemblages. Surprisingly though, we found that environmental factors simultaneously affected the body sizes of both fleas and hosts in the same direction, leading to a most likely deceptive correlation between parasite and host size across assemblages. We suggest that environmental factors may, to a great extent, reflect the environmental conditions inside the hosts' burrows where fleas develop and attain their adult body size, thus influencing their larval growth. Similarly, rodent body size is strongly influenced by air temperature, in the direction predicted by Bergmann's rule. If our findings are valid in other host-parasite associations, this may explain the dissenting results of both support and lack thereof for Harrison's rule.
© 2020 British Ecological Society.

Keywords:  body size; coevolution; ecological physiology; fleas; hosts; phenotypic evolution; rodents; trait association

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32936457     DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13344

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Ecol        ISSN: 0021-8790            Impact factor:   5.091


  2 in total

1.  Harrison's rule corroborated for the body size of cleptoparasitic cuckoo bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae: Nomadinae) and their hosts.

Authors:  Kayun Lim; Seunghyun Lee; Michael Orr; Seunghwan Lee
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-06-29       Impact factor: 4.996

2.  Morphological and molecular phylogenetical identification of Tricodectes pinguis from Japanese black bears (Ursus thibetanus japonicus) in Aomori Prefecture, Japan.

Authors:  Kodai Kusakisako; Hikaru Niiyama; Erika Asano; Asako Haraguchi; Jun Hakozaki; Kazuhiko Nakayama; Sakure Nakamura; Junji Shindo; Noboru Kudo; Hiromi Ikadai
Journal:  J Vet Med Sci       Date:  2022-05-30       Impact factor: 1.105

  2 in total

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