Abstract

Permanent ectoparasites live in stable environments; thus, their population dynamics are mostly adapted to changes in the host life cycle. We aimed to investigate how static and dynamic traits of red-footed falcons interplay with the dynamics of their louse subpopulations during breeding and how they affect the colonisation of new hosts by lice. We sampled red-footed falcon (Falco vespertinus) nestlings (two breeding seasons) and adults (one breeding season) in southern Hungary. The mean abundance of Colpocephalum subzerafae and Degeeriella rufa lice on the nestlings was modelled with generalized linear mixed models using clutch size and host sex in interaction with wing length. For adults, we used wing length and the number of days after laying the first egg, both in interaction with sex. D. rufa abundances increased with the nestlings’ wing length. In one year, this trend was steeper on females. In adult birds, both louse species exhibited higher abundances on females at the beginning, but it decreased subsequently through the breeding season. Contrarily, abundances were constantly low on adult males. Apparently, D. rufa postpones transmission until nestlings develop juvenile plumage and choose the more feathered individual among siblings. The sexual difference in the observed abundance could either be caused by the different plumage, or by the females’ preference for less parasitized males. Moreover, females likely have more time to preen during the incubation period, lowering their louse burdens. Thus, sex-biased infestation levels likely arise due to parasite preferences in the nestlings and host behavioural processes in the adult falcons.

Highlights

  • The abundance of ectoparasites can vary markedly between individuals, and a considerable part of this variation can be explained by certain individual host traits

  • Parasitol Res (2020) 119:1327–1335 understand the biology of host-ectoparasite interactions and explain their dynamics

  • Three louse species were found on the red-footed falcons

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Summary

Introduction

The abundance of ectoparasites can vary markedly between individuals, and a considerable part of this variation can be explained by certain individual host traits. Both static and dynamic host traits can influence infestation levels, like sex, age, body size and behaviour. Considering both trait types simultaneously in parasite ecological studies could help to Section Editor: Boris R. Balaton Limnological Institute, MTA Centre for Ecological Research, Tihany, Hungary. Conservation Genetics Research Group, Department of Ecology, Institute for Biology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Budapest, Hungary. The relationship between birds and lice offers an ideal model system for parasite ecological studies

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