Abstract

Energy and nutrients flow in diverse pathways across heterogeneous landscapes and tightly link the discrete food webs in local habitats. However, parasitism that enhances allochthonous resource input has not been previously documented. In a well-known example of parasite manipulation of host behaviour, crickets infected by mature hairworms (Nematomorpha) seek and jump into water when the worms reach the free-living stage. We found that a large number of trout (22%–61%), an aquatic predator, preyed on camel crickets (genera Diestrammena Brunner von Wattenwyl, 1888 and Tachycines Adelung, 1902) in September in five Japanese mountain streams where this host–parasite system exists. Trout (Kirikuchi charr, Salvelinus leucomaenis japonicus (Oshima, 1961); red-spotted masu salmon, Oncorhynchus masou ishikawae Jordan and McGregor, 1925) that preyed on crickets frequently ingested hairworms, whereas trout that did not prey on crickets did not ingest hairworms. Our results strongly suggest that hairworms enhance stream salmonid predation on camel crickets. This is the first documentation of parasitism enhancing allochthonous resource input in nature. Trout ingested a greater mass of crickets than other prey species in September, and this energy influx may play an important role in food-web dynamics in headwater streams.

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