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Size matters for lice on birds: Coevolutionary allometry of host and parasite body size
Authors:Andrea Harnos  Zsolt Lang  Dóra Petrás  Sarah E Bush  Krisztián Szabó  Lajos Rózsa
Institution:1. Department of Biomathematics and Informatics, University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest, Budapest, Hungary;2. Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah;3. Department of Ecology, University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest, Budapest, Hungary;4. MTA‐ELTE‐MTM Ecology Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H‐1117, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:Body size is one of the most fundamental characteristics of all organisms. It influences physiology, morphology, behavior, and even interspecific interactions such as those between parasites and their hosts. Host body size influences the magnitude and variability of parasite size according to Harrison's rule (HR: positive relationship between host and parasite body sizes) and Poulin's Increasing Variance Hypothesis (PIVH: positive relationship between host body size and the variability of parasite body size). We analyzed parasite–host body size allometry for 581 species of avian lice (~15% of known diversity) and their hosts. We applied phylogenetic generalized least squares (PGLS) methods to account for phylogenetic nonindependence controlling for host and parasite phylogenies separately and variance heterogeneity. We tested HR and PIVH for the major families of avian lice (Ricinidae, Menoponidae, Philopteridae), and for distinct ecological guilds within Philopteridae. Our data indicate that most families and guilds of avian lice follow both HR and PIVH; however, ricinids did not follow PIVH and the “body lice” guild of philopterid lice did not follow HR or PIVH. We discuss mathematical and ecological factors that may be responsible for these patterns, and we discuss the potential pervasiveness of these relationships among all parasites on Earth.
Keywords:Harrison's rule  Phthiraptera  phylogenetic generalized least squares models  Poulin's increasing variance hypothesis
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