Abstract

Most ecologists and conservationists perceive parasitic infections as deleterious for the hosts. Their effects, however, depend on many factors including host body condition, parasite load and the life cycle of the parasite. More research into how multiple parasite taxa affect host body condition is required and will help us to better understand host-parasite coevolution. We used body condition indices, based on mass-length relationships, to test the effects that abundances and biomasses of six parasite taxa (five trematodes, Apatemon sp., Tylodelphys sp., Stegodexamene anguillae, Telogaster opisthorchis, Coitocaecum parvum, and the nematode Eustrongylides sp.) with different modes of transmission have on the body condition of their intermediate or final fish host, the common bully Gobiomorphus cotidianus in New Zealand. We used two alternative body condition methods, the Scaled Mass Index (SMI) and Fulton’s condition factor. General linear and hierarchical partitioning models consistently showed that fish body condition varied strongly across three lakes and seasons, and that most parasites did not have an effect on the two body condition indices. However, fish body condition showed a highly significant humpbacked relationship with the total abundance of all six parasite taxa, mostly driven by Apatemon sp. and S. anguillae, indicating that the effects of these parasites can range from positive to negative as abundance increases. Such a response was also evident in models including total parasite biomass. Our methodological comparison supports the SMI as the most robust mass-length method to examine the effects of parasitic infections on fish body condition, and suggests that linear, negative relationships between host condition and parasite load should not be assumed.

Highlights

  • By definition, parasites are organisms that benefit from their hosts as a habitat and food source, causing some degree of harm to them that, in extreme cases, can lead to host deathPLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0168992 December 28, 2016Non-Linear Relationships between Fish Body Condition and Parasite Load

  • We examined relationships between body condition indices (BCIs) and abundances of six parasite species with different modes of transmission in the common bully Gobiomorphus cotidianus McDowall 1975, in three New Zealand lakes over three seasons

  • Our study highlights the importance of considering non-linear responses when testing for the effects of parasites on host health, as defined by two body mass-length indices (BCIs) widely

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Summary

Introduction

Parasites are organisms that benefit from their hosts as a habitat and food source, causing some degree of harm to them that, in extreme cases, can lead to host death. These parasites often induce complex behavioural alterations and shifts in habitat use in intermediate hosts that may serve to increase parasite transmission probabilities to final hosts, concomitantly increasing intermediate host predation risk and prey intake in definitive host predators [33] Since these changes can boost host weight including energy reserves, endoparasitic infections are a suitable case-study to test for potential neutral or positive effects of parasites on BCIs. In this study, we explore in detail the consequences of endoparasitic infections for fish BCIs. We examined relationships between BCIs and abundances of six parasite species (five trematodes and one nematode) with different modes of transmission in the common bully Gobiomorphus cotidianus McDowall 1975, in three New Zealand lakes over three seasons. CF is a simplistic ratio that assumes a cubic relationship between mass and length that does not reflect fish growth patterns in nature

Materials and Methods
Results
Coitocaecum parvum r
Discussion
45. Legendre P lmodel2
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