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  •   HuVetA kezdőlap
  • Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja
  • 2018
  • Dokumentum megnyitása
  •   HuVetA kezdőlap
  • Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja
  • 2018
  • Dokumentum megnyitása
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A tolltetű-fertőzöttség és a fészekaljméret kapcsolata a vörös vércsénél (Falco tinnunculus)

Megtekintés/Megnyitás
MAL 2018 12 745 (2.759Mb)
Dátum
2018-12
Szerző
Piross, Imre Sándor
Saliga, Rebeka
Solt, Szabolcs
Horváth, Éva
Kotymán, László
Harnos, Andrea
Rózsa, Lajos
Palatitz, Péter
Fehérvári, Péter
Metaadat
Részletes rekord
Absztrakt
SUMMARY Background: Lice are common ectoparasites of birds, completing their entire life cycle in the plumage. Transmission – in most cases – requires physical contact between hosts. Lice may benefit from choosing host individuals with better survival prospects and dispersal chances. Bodily contacts between parents and offsprings provide a good opportunity for host selection. The Common Kestrel is a widespread, small-bodied raptor of the Palearctic region, with well-known breeding biology and ectoparasite fauna, making it suitable to study the ecological correlates of vertical transmission of lice. Objectives: The aim of our study was to investigate how the sex, maturity and clutch size of Common Kestrel nestlings affect the abundance of their lice. Materials and Methods: Field work was carried out in Körös-Maros National Park Directorate (Hungary). The ectoparasites were collected from nestlings (n = 54) with dust-ruffling. The effect of the host’s sex, wing length and clutch size on the abundance of their lice was analysed using negative binomial mixed models. Results and Discussion: In case of Colpocephalum subzerafae, none of the investigated variables had a significant effect. Contrarily, clutch size had a significant effect on Degeeriella rufa abundance. In small clutches (3–4 nestlings) the mean abundance of D. rufa (15.5 95% C.I.: 8–30) is 3.7 times higher, than in large (5–6 nestlings) clutches (4.2 95% C.I.: 2.3–7.4). We discuss two non-exclusive explanations of this pattern. First, parental quality is known to affect the clutch size. If low quality parents are also more heavily infested with lice, this could explain the higher louse load of their nestlings. Alternatively, according to the dilution hypothesis, long life-cycle ectoparasites (such as lice), that are incapable to significantly raise their subpopulation size till the fledging of the chicks, disperse among the nestlings, resulting in lower per nestling louse counts in larger clutches. According to our results both the breeding parameters and the quality of the parents may affect their offsprings’ ectoparasite load.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10832/2833
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