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Ecological causes of sex-biased parasitism in threespine stickleback
Authors:T. E. REIMCHEN   P. NOSIL
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of Victoria, PO Box 3020, Victoria, B.C., Canada, V8W3N5;Department of Biosciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., Canada, V5A 1S6 Received 30 August 2000;accepted for publication 8 January 2001
Abstract:Males and females can differ in levels of parasitism and such differences may be mediated by the costs of sexual selection or by ecological differences between the genders. In threespine stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus , males exhibit paternal care and territorial nest defence and the costs of reproduction may be particularly high for males relative to females. We monitored levels of parasitism for 15 years in a population of stickleback infected by four different parasite species. Consistent with general predictions, overall parasite prevalence (total parasitism) was greater in males than in females. However, this excess did not occur for each species of parasite. Males had higher prevalence of a cestode Cyathocephalus truncatus and a trematode Bunodera sp. relative to females, while females had higher prevalence of a cestode Schistocephalus solidus and nematodes. This suggested ecological sources to differences in parasitism rather than reproductive costs and therefore we examined diet of unparasitized stickleback, predicting that differences in dietary niche would influence relative parasitism. This was partially confirmed and showed that female stomach contents had increased frequency of pelagic items, the major habitat for the primary host of S. solidus whereas males exhibited increased frequency of benthic items, the dominant habitat of C. truncatus and Bunodera. Temporal shifts in the extent and direction of differential parasitism among years between the sexes were associated with temporal shifts in dietary differences. Our results, combined with those in the literature, suggest that ecological differences between genders could be a more important component to patterns of parasitic infection in natural populations than currently appreciated.
Keywords:parasitism    sexual dimorphism    ecological selection    sexual selection    diet    resource partitioning    Gasterosteus aculeatus    Queen Charlotte Islands
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