Sex differences in flea infections among rodent hosts: is there a male bias?
Authors:
- Krzysztof Kowalski,
- Michał Bogdziewicz,
- Urszula Marta Eichert,
- Leszek Stanisław Rychlik
Abstract
Recognizing patterns of parasite distribution among wildlife hosts is of major importance due to growing risk of transmission of zoonotic diseases to humans. Thus, sex-dependent parasite distribution in higher vertebrates is extensively studied, and males are often found more parasitized than females. Male-biased parasitism may be the result of weaker immunocompetence of male hosts owing to the immunosuppressive effect of androgens. Moreover, larger hosts (males) may demonstrate higher parasite infestation levels than smaller individuals (females), as they constitute a better nutritional resource for parasites and provide them with a greater variety of niches. In the present work, we investigated sex-dependent patterns of flea distribution among three common rodent species (Apodemus agrarius, Apodemus flavicollis, and Myodes glareolus). We hypothesized that males have a higher flea infestation than females. We confirm male-biased parasitism in A. agrarius and M. glareolus, but not in A. flavicollis. Additionally, flea infestation increased with body mass in A. agrarius, but not in A. flavicollis and M. glareolus. The detected differences in parasite distribution among sexes are probably the result of immunosuppressive effects of androgens and spatial behavior of males.
- Record ID
- UAM9fb9dc9ddac94ec9a116af7967813e1a
- Author
- Journal series
- Parasitology Research, ISSN 0932-0113
- Issue year
- 2015
- Vol
- 114
- Pages
- 337-341
- ASJC Classification
- ; ; ; ;
- DOI
- DOI:10.1007/s00436-014-4231-z Opening in a new tab
- Language
- (en) English
- Score (nominal)
- 30
- Score source
- journalList
- Score
- Publication indicators
- = 10; = 14; = 30; : 2015 = 0.994; : 2015 (2 years) = 2.027 - 2015 (5 years) =2.096
- Citation count
- 31
- Uniform Resource Identifier
- https://researchportal.amu.edu.pl/info/article/UAM9fb9dc9ddac94ec9a116af7967813e1a/
- URN
urn:amu-prod:UAM9fb9dc9ddac94ec9a116af7967813e1a
* presented citation count is obtained through Internet information analysis and it is close to the number calculated by the Publish or PerishOpening in a new tab system.