Abstract

Parasites, by definition, can affect mortality of their host, making parasitism an important biotic determinant of animal population dynamics and community structure. Reduction in the number of larger, reproductive age females in populations of the Pacific sand crab, Emerita rathbunae (Decapoda, Hippidae), was observed in studies of the helminth community of this host. The aim of this study was to determine if high abundance of the metacercaria of the trematode, Microphallus nicolli (Microphallidae), causes mortality in this host. Females of E. rathbunae were collected from four sandy beaches in Guerrero State, Mexico, and helminths were collected from each crab. An analysis of variance (Anova) was applied to these data in order to identify differences in abundance between sizes of crabs, and an analysis of covariance (Ancova) was applied to identify differences in the abundance of metacercariae between locations. Parasite-related mortality was inferred by a decrease in abundance in older hosts. Linear and polynomial regressions of mean abundance of helminths (log x+1 transformed data) vs. cephalothorax length of crabs were significant for the four populations of E. rathbunae, indicating increased mortality of older, more heavily infected female crabs and resultant removal from the population. Encapsulation and melanization of cysts by crabs was observed, indicating that an immune response by crabs also killed a portion of the cysts from subsequent exposures. Mortality of hosts through behavioral modification favoring transmission of highly infected crabs was suggested as the driving force behind this process.

Highlights

  • Parasitism is an important biotic determinant of animal population dynamics and community structure

  • Prevalence of M. nicolli was 100% at all four locations, mean abundance varied from 857 metacercariae/crab ± 598 metacercariae (Ixtapa) to 2,763 metacercariae/crab ± 1,236 metacercariae (San Andrés, Table 1) (Ancova, F = 43.62, P = 0.0001)

  • Metacercaria of M. nicolli continue to grow post-encystment (Peoples and Poulin 2011; Pina et al 2011), and we found that size of cysts differed according to developmental stage (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Parasitism is an important biotic determinant of animal population dynamics and community structure. Parasites can influence host numbers within a population by either decreasing recruitment rate (by reducing host fecundity) or increasing mortality rate. Several approaches based on statistical evidence have been used in a number of studies in an attempt to determine if infection with parasites affects host mortality rates in natural populations (Koehler and Poulin 2010; Latham and Poulin 2002c; Thomas et al 1995). A frequent feature of many models is that host mortality rises as parasite load increases (Koehler and Poulin 2010; Latham and Poulin 2002c).

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