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Effect of the nutritional environment and reproductive investment on herbivore-parasite interactions in grazing environments
Authors:Smith  L A; White  P C L; Hutchings  M R
Institution:a Animal Nutrition and Health, Scottish Agricultural College, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, United Kingdom and b Environment Department, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom
Abstract:Parasitism is a serious challenge to herbivore health and fitness.To avoid parasites, herbivores avoid grazing near feces, creatinga mosaic of contaminated tall avoided areas (tussocks) and noncontaminatedshort grazed areas (gaps). The mosaic represents a nutritionversus parasitism trade-off in that feces-contaminated tussocksare localized concentrations of both forage resources and parasites.Here, we use a grazing experiment with a natural tussock–gapmosaic to determine how the nutritional environment and reproductiveeffort affect sheep grazing decisions when faced with this trade-off.There were 3 animal treatments (Barren ewes, ewes suckling asingle lamb, and ewes suckling twin lambs) and 2 environmenttreatments (low and high nitrogen). Sward selection and grazingbehavior were measured using focal observations on grazing ewes.Sheep showed an overall strong and significant avoidance oftussocks across all treatments. However, there was a reductionin the avoidance of tussocks by ewes on the low-nitrogen (low-N)plots. Ewes suckling twins showed a reduced avoidance of tussockscompared with barren ewes. Lactating ewes in low-N environmentsfurther reduced their avoidance of tussocks. Ewes with twins,which are at greatest risk from parasites, had the greatestcontact with feces and thus parasites, especially in low-N environments.We conclude that twin-bearing ewes accept the increased riskof parasitism in order to gain the nutrients required to supportincreased reproductive effort, thus increasing their investmentin current offspring at the cost of increased risk of parasitismand thus future potential reproductive attempts.
Keywords:feces avoidance  fitness  grazing  maternal investment  parasite risk  
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