Does avian malaria reduce fledging success: an experimental test of the selection hypothesis

Update Item Information
Publication Type pre-print
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Clayton, Dale H.
Other Author Knutie, Sarah A.; Waite, Jessica L.
Title Does avian malaria reduce fledging success: an experimental test of the selection hypothesis
Date 2013-01-01
Description Like many parasites, avian haematozoa are often found at lower infection intensities in older birds than young birds. One explanation, known as the "selection" hypothesis, is that infected young birds die before reaching adulthood, thus removing the highest infection intensities from the host population. We tested this hypothesis in the field by experimentally infecting nestling rock pigeons (Columba livia) with the malaria parasite Haemoproteus columbae. We compared the condition and fledging success of infected nestlings to that of uninfected controls. There was no significant difference in the body mass, fledging success, age at fledging, or post-fledging survival of experimental versus control birds. These results were unexpected, given that long-term studies of older pigeons have demonstrated chronic effects of H. columbae. We conclude that H. columbae has little impact on nestling pigeons, even when they are directly infected with the parasite. Our study provides no support for the selection hypothesis that older birds have lower parasite loads because parasites are removed from the population by infected nestlings dying. To our knowledge, this is the first study to test the impact of avian malaria using experimental inoculations under natural conditions.
Type Text
Publisher Springer
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Knutie, S. A., Waite, J. L., & Clayton, D. H. (2013). Does avian malaria reduce fledging success: an experimental test of the selection hypothesis. Evolutionary Ecology, 27(1), 185-91.
Rights Management (c) Springer (The original publication is available at www.springerlink.com)
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 1,723,546 bytes
Identifier uspace,18151
ARK ark:/87278/s6bg36tt
Setname ir_uspace
ID 708341
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6bg36tt
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