An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies

Parasitism is defined as an obligatory hetero-specific relationship where resource transfer between a host and parasite occurs. This results in the sub-optimal expression of host life-history traits and a consequent reduction in host fitness. The Louse Fly, Crataerina pallida (Diptera: Hippoboscidae...

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Main Author: Walker, Mark David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/1/markdavidwalkerphd.pdf
https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/8/10701135.pdf
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spelling ftsheffhu:oai:shura.shu.ac.uk:14064 2023-05-15T14:17:17+02:00 An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies Walker, Mark David 2011-02 application/pdf https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/1/markdavidwalkerphd.pdf https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/8/10701135.pdf en eng http://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/ https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/1/markdavidwalkerphd.pdf https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/8/10701135.pdf WALKER, Mark David (2011). An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies. Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University. arr Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2011 ftsheffhu 2023-03-26T20:25:55Z Parasitism is defined as an obligatory hetero-specific relationship where resource transfer between a host and parasite occurs. This results in the sub-optimal expression of host life-history traits and a consequent reduction in host fitness. The Louse Fly, Crataerina pallida (Diptera: Hippoboscidae), is a monoxenous haematophagous nest ectoparasite of the Common Swift, Apus apus (Aves: Apodidae). Despite expectations, no detrimental effect to hosts from C. pallida has been determined. Here this relationship is re-apprised. C. pallida life-history is investigated, with particular reference to those traits of pertinence to its parasitic efficacy. Whether C. pallida has a detrimental effect upon A. apus is subsequently investigated. C. pallida was found to exhibit life-history characteristics strongly indicative that it is parasitic in nature. Morphological and ecological adaptations towards a parasitic lifestyle were identified. Higher levels of prevalence, aggregation, and population abundance were observed than previously reported. Populations were discovered to decline over time and to be heavily female biased. Evidence for previously unreported phenomena such as horizontal parasite transmission, intra-brood host selection, population fluctuations, male mating competition, and host facultative heterothermy was discovered. However, no detrimental impact upon a number of host traits, including previously unstudied aspects of nestling post-natal development and parental investment, were ascertained as a result of C. pallida parasitism. Therefore C. pallida does not fulfil the criteria of the standard definition of a parasitic species. The long term intimacy of the association between C. pallida and A. apus may have resulted in the development of reduced parasitic virulence as expected by hostparasite theory. The discoveries made, especially those pertaining to C. pallida population stability and abundance, may have implications for further studies investigating C. pallida virulence. This study emphasizes the need ... Thesis Apus apus SHURA (Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive) The Louse ENVELOPE(-56.415,-56.415,51.700,51.700)
institution Open Polar
collection SHURA (Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive)
op_collection_id ftsheffhu
language English
description Parasitism is defined as an obligatory hetero-specific relationship where resource transfer between a host and parasite occurs. This results in the sub-optimal expression of host life-history traits and a consequent reduction in host fitness. The Louse Fly, Crataerina pallida (Diptera: Hippoboscidae), is a monoxenous haematophagous nest ectoparasite of the Common Swift, Apus apus (Aves: Apodidae). Despite expectations, no detrimental effect to hosts from C. pallida has been determined. Here this relationship is re-apprised. C. pallida life-history is investigated, with particular reference to those traits of pertinence to its parasitic efficacy. Whether C. pallida has a detrimental effect upon A. apus is subsequently investigated. C. pallida was found to exhibit life-history characteristics strongly indicative that it is parasitic in nature. Morphological and ecological adaptations towards a parasitic lifestyle were identified. Higher levels of prevalence, aggregation, and population abundance were observed than previously reported. Populations were discovered to decline over time and to be heavily female biased. Evidence for previously unreported phenomena such as horizontal parasite transmission, intra-brood host selection, population fluctuations, male mating competition, and host facultative heterothermy was discovered. However, no detrimental impact upon a number of host traits, including previously unstudied aspects of nestling post-natal development and parental investment, were ascertained as a result of C. pallida parasitism. Therefore C. pallida does not fulfil the criteria of the standard definition of a parasitic species. The long term intimacy of the association between C. pallida and A. apus may have resulted in the development of reduced parasitic virulence as expected by hostparasite theory. The discoveries made, especially those pertaining to C. pallida population stability and abundance, may have implications for further studies investigating C. pallida virulence. This study emphasizes the need ...
format Thesis
author Walker, Mark David
spellingShingle Walker, Mark David
An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
author_facet Walker, Mark David
author_sort Walker, Mark David
title An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
title_short An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
title_full An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
title_fullStr An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies
title_sort investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between common swifts and hippoboscid louse-flies
publishDate 2011
url https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/1/markdavidwalkerphd.pdf
https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/8/10701135.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.415,-56.415,51.700,51.700)
geographic The Louse
geographic_facet The Louse
genre Apus apus
genre_facet Apus apus
op_relation http://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/
https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/1/markdavidwalkerphd.pdf
https://shura.shu.ac.uk/14064/8/10701135.pdf
WALKER, Mark David (2011). An investigation into the host-parasite interrelationship between Common Swifts and Hippoboscid Louse-Flies. Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University.
op_rights arr
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