Parasite-mediated inbreeding depression in wild red deer.

IF 3.9 2区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Adam Z Hasik, Anna M Hewett, Katie Maris, Sean J Morris, Ali Morris, Gregory F Albery, Josephine M Pemberton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Inbreeding depression is the reduction in fitness of inbred individuals relative to their more outbred counterparts. Parasitism also reduces fitness and is a route by which inbreeding depression may operate, yet the complete pathway from inbreeding to parasitism to fitness has almost never been documented in the wild. We investigated parasite-mediated inbreeding depression in a wild population of a large mammal (red deer, Cervus elaphus), using high-quality individual-level data on fitness in juveniles and adult females, longitudinal infection data for three gastrointestinal helminth parasites, and genomic inbreeding coefficients. We found evidence for parasite-mediated inbreeding depression via strongyle nematodes in juvenile survival, independent of direct adverse effects of inbreeding on survival and indirect effects of inbreeding on survival via birth weight. Inbreeding also reduced fitness in reproductive adults by reducing overwinter survival. Our study reveals three independent pathways by which inbreeding depresses fitness and highlights the rarely-studied route of parasitism.

寄生虫介导的野生马鹿近交抑制。
近亲繁殖抑制是近亲繁殖个体相对于近亲繁殖个体的适应性降低。寄生也会降低适合度,是近交抑制的一个途径,但从近交到寄生再到适合度的完整途径在野外几乎从未被记录过。我们利用高质量的个体水平的幼鹿和成年母鹿适应度数据、三种胃肠道寄生虫的纵向感染数据和基因组近交系数,研究了一种大型哺乳动物(马鹿,Cervus elaphus)野生种群中寄生虫介导的近交抑制。我们发现了寄生虫通过线虫介导的近交抑制幼体存活的证据,这一证据独立于近交对存活的直接不利影响和通过出生体重对存活的间接影响。近亲繁殖还通过减少成虫的越冬存活率而降低了成虫的适应性。我们的研究揭示了近交降低适合度的三个独立途径,并强调了很少研究的寄生途径。
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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来源期刊
Heredity
Heredity 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.60%
发文量
84
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Heredity is the official journal of the Genetics Society. It covers a broad range of topics within the field of genetics and therefore papers must address conceptual or applied issues of interest to the journal''s wide readership
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