Abstract

The potential impact of parasitism on pairing patterns of the amphipod Paracalliope fluviatilis was investigated with regard to the infection status of both males and females. Two helminth parasites commonly use this crustacean species as second intermediate host. One of them, Coitocaecum parvum, is a progenetic trematode with an egg-producing metacercaria occasionally reaching 2.0 mm in length, i.e. more than 50% the typical length of its amphipod host. The amphipod was shown to exhibit the common reproductive features of most precopula pair-forming crustaceans, i.e. larger males and females among pairs than among singles, more fecund females in pairs, and a trend for size-assortative pairing. Although effects of parasitism were expected a priori, no major influence of the two trematodes was shown on the host reproductive patterns herein investigated. In particular, the occurrence of pairs of infected individuals conformed exactly to what can be expected under the null hypothesis of completely random pair formation. The absence of parasite effect was also illustrated by a similar fecundity of infected and uninfected females. This study thus tends to moderate the widespread view of a strong influence of parasitism on host mating patterns, as suggested by the recent literature on this specific subject.

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