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      An experimental conflict of interest between parasites reveals the mechanism of host manipulation

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          Causing energy drain is enough to fulfill a parasite’s need to change host behavior. A parasite can manipulate host behavior to its own interest either directly or indirectly through increased energy drain driving the host to be risk prone. We can distinguish experimentally between these mechanisms using a potential conflict of interest between 2 simultaneous parasites. We find support for the latter mechanism. An additional experiment with hungry and satiated hosts confirms our interpretation.

          Abstract

          Parasites can increase their host’s predation susceptibility. It is a long-standing puzzle, whether this is caused by host manipulation, an evolved strategy of the parasite, or by side effects due to, for example, the parasite consuming energy from its host thereby changing the host’s trade-off between avoiding predation and foraging toward foraging. Here, we use sequential infection of three-spined sticklebacks with the cestode Schistocephalus solidus so that parasites have a conflict of interest over the direction of host manipulation. With true manipulation, the not yet infective parasite should reduce rather than enhance risk taking because predation would be fatal for its fitness; if host behavior is changed by a side effect, the 2 parasites would add their increase of predation risk because both drain energy. Our results support the latter hypothesis. In an additional experiment, we tested both infected and uninfected fish either starved or satiated. True host manipulation should act independently of the fish’s hunger status and continue when energy drain is balanced through satiation. Starvation and satiation affect the risk averseness of infected sticklebacks similarly to that of uninfected starved and satiated ones. Increased energy drain rather than active host manipulation dominates behavioral changes of S. solidus-infected sticklebacks.

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          Most cited references26

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          Multiparasite communities in animals and humans: frequency, structure and pathogenic significance.

          Individual humans and animals are subject to infection by a variety of parasites (broadly defined to include viruses, bacteria and other non-protozoan microparasites) at any one time. Multiple parasite infections occur frequently in populations of wild animals as well as in humans from developing countries. In some species and regions, hosts with multiple infections are more common than hosts with either no infection or a single infection. Studies, predominantly on animals, show that a wide variety of environmental and host-dependent factors can influence the structure and dynamics of the communities of parasites that make up these multiple infections. In addition, synergistic and competitive interactions can occur between parasite species, which can influence the likelihood of their successful transmission to other hosts and increase or decrease their overall pathogenic impact. This review summarises aspects of our current knowledge on the frequency of multiparasite infections, the factors which influence them, and their pathogenic significance.
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            Parasitic manipulation: where are we and where should we go?

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              Comparing mechanisms of host manipulation across host and parasite taxa.

              Parasites affect host behavior in several ways. They can alter activity, microhabitats or both. For trophically transmitted parasites (the focus of our study), decreased activity might impair the ability of hosts to respond to final-host predators, and increased activity and altered microhabitat choice might increase contact rates between hosts and final-host predators. In an analysis of trophically transmitted parasites, more parasite groups altered activity than altered microhabitat choice. Parasites that infected vertebrates were more likely to impair the host's reaction to predators, whereas parasites that infected invertebrates were more likely to increase the host's contact with predators. The site of infection might affect how parasites manipulate their hosts. For instance, parasites in the central nervous system seem particularly suited to manipulating host behavior. Manipulative parasites commonly occupy the body cavity, muscles and central nervous systems of their hosts. Acanthocephalans in the data set differed from other taxa in that they occurred exclusively in the body cavity of invertebrates. In addition, they were more likely to alter microhabitat choice than activity. Parasites in the body cavity (across parasite types) were more likely to be associated with increased host contact with predators. Parasites can manipulate the host through energetic drain, but most parasites use more sophisticated means. For instance, parasites target four physiological systems that shape behavior in both invertebrates and vertebrates: neural, endocrine, neuromodulatory and immunomodulatory. The interconnections between these systems make it difficult to isolate specific mechanisms of host behavioral manipulation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behav Ecol
                Behav. Ecol
                beheco
                beheco
                Behavioral Ecology
                Oxford University Press (UK )
                1045-2249
                1465-7279
                Mar-Apr 2016
                23 November 2015
                23 November 2015
                : 27
                : 2
                : 617-627
                Affiliations
                Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Biology , August-Thienemann-Straße 2, D-24306 Plön, Germany
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to N. Hafer. E-mail: hafer@ 123456evolbio.mpg.de .

                Handling editor: Marc Thery

                Article
                10.1093/beheco/arv200
                4797381
                27004014
                72c010b7-d8bd-4d8e-9215-4af03610d6ab
                © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 28 July 2015
                : 14 October 2015
                : 1 November 2015
                Page count
                Pages: 11
                Categories
                Original Article

                Ecology
                host manipulation,host–parasite interactions,schistocephalus solidus,sequential infection,side effects,three-spined stickleback.

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