Impacts of a Simulated Infection on the Locomotor Behavior of Invasive and Noninvasive Species of Congeneric Anurans.

Ecological and evolutionary physiology Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-12 DOI:10.1086/729774
Thaysa G Oliveira, Laurie Araspin, Carlos A Navas, Anthony Herrel
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Abstract

AbstractLocomotion is essential for survival, but it requires resources such as energy and metabolites and therefore may conflict with other physiological processes that also demand resources, particularly expensive processes such as immunological responses. This possible trade-off may impose limits on either the magnitude of immune responses or the patterns of activity and performance. Previous studies have shown that invasive species may have a depressed immune response, allowing them to maintain locomotor function and reproduction even when sick. This may contribute to the ecological success of invasive species in colonization and dispersal. In contrast, noninvasive species tend to reduce activity as a response to infection. Here, we studied the impact of a simulated infection on locomotor performance and voluntary movement in the anurans Xenopus laevis (a globally invasive species) and Xenopus allofraseri (a noninvasive congeneric). We found that a simulated infection reduces locomotor performance in both species, with an accentuated effect on X. allofraseri. Voluntary movement was marginally different between species. Our data suggest that a simulated infection leads to behavioral depression and reduced locomotor performance in anurans and show that this effect is limited in the invasive X. laevis. Contrasting responses to an immune challenge have been reported in the few amphibian taxa analyzed to date and suggest relationships between ecology and immunology that deserve further investigation. Specifically, a depressed immune response may underlie a propension to invasion in some species. Whether this is a general trend for invasive species remains to be tested, but our data add to the growing body of work documenting depressed immune systems in invasive species.

模拟感染对入侵和非入侵同属无尾类物种运动行为的影响
摘要定位运动对生存至关重要,但它需要能量和代谢物等资源,因此可能与同样需要资源的其他生理过程发生冲突,特别是与免疫反应等昂贵的过程发生冲突。这种可能的权衡可能会限制免疫反应的程度或活动和表现的模式。以前的研究表明,入侵物种可能具有抑制性免疫反应,使它们即使在生病时也能保持运动功能和繁殖能力。这可能有助于入侵物种在殖民和扩散方面取得生态成功。与此相反,非入侵物种往往会减少活动作为对感染的反应。在这里,我们研究了模拟感染对无尾目动物Xenopus laevis(全球入侵物种)和Xenopus allofraseri(非入侵同属物种)的运动表现和自主运动的影响。我们发现,模拟感染会降低这两种动物的运动能力,对 X. allofraseri 的影响更为明显。不同物种的自主运动能力略有不同。我们的数据表明,模拟感染会导致无尾类动物的行为抑制和运动能力下降,并表明这种影响对入侵的 X. laevis 是有限的。在迄今为止分析的少数两栖动物类群中,对免疫挑战的反应截然不同,这表明生态学与免疫学之间的关系值得进一步研究。具体来说,免疫反应低下可能是某些物种倾向于入侵的原因。这是否是入侵物种的普遍趋势还有待检验,但我们的数据为越来越多的记录入侵物种免疫系统低下的研究工作增添了新的内容。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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