• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: The Effect of Mermithid Parasitism on Predation of Nymphal Baetis bicaudatus (Ephemeroptera) by Invertebrates
  • Beteiligte: Vance, Sarah A.; Peckarsky, Barbara L.
  • Erschienen: Springer-Verlag, 1997
  • Erschienen in: Oecologia
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 0029-8549; 1432-1939
  • Schlagwörter: Community Ecology
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  • Beschreibung: <p>We investigated how infection by the mermithid nematode Gasteromermis sp. affected predation on its nymphal mayfly host, Baetis bicaudatus, by two invertebrate predators -- the stonefly nymphs of Kogotus modestus and the caddisfly larvae of Rhyacophila hyalinata. Predation trials and behavioral observations were conducted in stream-side, flow-through experimental chambers. When parasitized and unparasitized prey were offered in equal numbers, K. modestus consumed significantly more parasitized than unparasitized nymphs. R. hyalinata consumed equal numbers of both prey types. Behavioral observations of foraging K. modestus on parasitized and unparasitized prey suggested that the increased consumption of parasitized nymphs was due to differences in the behavior of infected mayflies in response to the predator. Specifically, parasitized nymphs drifted less often to escape an approaching predator (non-contact encounters) compared to unparasitized nymphs, which increased the number of contact encounters and attacks that occurred between K. modestus and parasitized prey. Because all hosts are castrated, these behavioral alterations affect only the fitness of the parasite, which is killed along with its host by invertebrate predation. We present a number of hypotheses to explain why the parasite causes increased predation on its host. These include the large size of the parasite affecting the sensory abilities of the host, the larger energetic costs of escape behavior for parasitized individuals, and natural selection from fish predation against drifting behavior by parasitized individuals.</p>