| Literature DB >> 33625970 |
Gregory F Albery, Alison Morris, Sean Morris, Fiona Kenyon, Daniel H Nussey, Josephine M Pemberton.
Abstract
AbstractReproduction in wild animals can divert limited resources away from immune defense, resulting in increased parasite burdens. A long-standing prediction of life-history theory states that these parasites can harm the reproductive individual, reducing its subsequent survival and fecundity, producing reproduction-fitness trade-offs. Here, we examined associations among reproductive allocation, immunity, parasitism, and subsequent survival and fecundity in a wild population of individually identified red deer (Cervus elaphus). Using path analysis, we investigated whether costs of lactation in terms of downstream survival and fecundity were mediated by changes in strongyle nematode count and mucosal antibody levels. Lactating females exhibited increased parasite counts, which were in turn associated with substantially decreased fitness in the following year in terms of overwinter survival, fecundity, subsequent calf weight, and parturition date. This study offers observational evidence for parasite regulation of multiple life-history trade-offs, supporting the role of parasites as an important mediating factor in wild mammal populations.Entities:
Keywords: fitness costs; helminths; path analysis; reproduction; survival; wild mammal
Year: 2021 PMID: 33625970 DOI: 10.1086/712633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am Nat ISSN: 0003-0147 Impact factor: 3.926