Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach

In recent years there has been much interest in physiological trade-offs involving host immune function and parasite defence, with the suggestion that they could play a pivotal role in mediating well-documented life-history trade-offs, such as the cost of reproduction. 2. Among studies of birds, the...

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Published in:Functional Ecology
Main Authors: Knowles, S, Nakagawa, S, Sheldon, B
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:bc8cb6aa-e3bb-4865-92a8-60f3a4c1da63 2023-05-15T15:34:43+02:00 Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach Knowles, S Nakagawa, S Sheldon, B 2016-07-29 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:bc8cb6aa-e3bb-4865-92a8-60f3a4c1da63 eng eng doi:10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:bc8cb6aa-e3bb-4865-92a8-60f3a4c1da63 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess Journal article 2016 ftuloxford https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x 2022-06-28T20:22:34Z In recent years there has been much interest in physiological trade-offs involving host immune function and parasite defence, with the suggestion that they could play a pivotal role in mediating well-documented life-history trade-offs, such as the cost of reproduction. 2. Among studies of birds, the hypothesized link between reproductive effort and parasite defence has received particular attention, yet support for a trade-off between these two traits remains equivocal. 3. We used meta-regression analysis and an information-theoretic approach to investigate, among avian studies, how strong the effect of experimentally altered reproductive effort is on (i) infection with blood parasites from four common genera (Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon, Trypanosoma and Plasmodium) and (ii) the ability of hosts to mount an immune response to novel antigenic challenge. 4. Across studies, there was a relatively weak but well-supported positive effect of reproductive effort on blood parasite infection levels. Importantly, this effect was significantly influenced by the parasitological measure employed; where parasitaemia (proportion of parasitized cells within infected hosts) was used as the response variable, effect size was almost three times as large as where infection prevalence (presence vs. absence of infection among hosts) was measured. 5. A moderate negative effect of reproductive effort on immune responsiveness was also found across studies. This effect was greater the longer the time that had elapsed between manipulation of reproductive effort and measurement of immune responsiveness, and was also related to the stage at which reproductive effort was manipulated, with manipulation during brood rearing producing stronger effects than manipulation during incubation. 6. Overall, these results provide evidence that reproductive effort can have pronounced effects on both parasitism and immune responses, but that effect size is influenced by methodology - what is measured and when. Exactly how such effects arise and whether ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Avian Studies ORA - Oxford University Research Archive Functional Ecology 23 2 405 415
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language English
description In recent years there has been much interest in physiological trade-offs involving host immune function and parasite defence, with the suggestion that they could play a pivotal role in mediating well-documented life-history trade-offs, such as the cost of reproduction. 2. Among studies of birds, the hypothesized link between reproductive effort and parasite defence has received particular attention, yet support for a trade-off between these two traits remains equivocal. 3. We used meta-regression analysis and an information-theoretic approach to investigate, among avian studies, how strong the effect of experimentally altered reproductive effort is on (i) infection with blood parasites from four common genera (Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon, Trypanosoma and Plasmodium) and (ii) the ability of hosts to mount an immune response to novel antigenic challenge. 4. Across studies, there was a relatively weak but well-supported positive effect of reproductive effort on blood parasite infection levels. Importantly, this effect was significantly influenced by the parasitological measure employed; where parasitaemia (proportion of parasitized cells within infected hosts) was used as the response variable, effect size was almost three times as large as where infection prevalence (presence vs. absence of infection among hosts) was measured. 5. A moderate negative effect of reproductive effort on immune responsiveness was also found across studies. This effect was greater the longer the time that had elapsed between manipulation of reproductive effort and measurement of immune responsiveness, and was also related to the stage at which reproductive effort was manipulated, with manipulation during brood rearing producing stronger effects than manipulation during incubation. 6. Overall, these results provide evidence that reproductive effort can have pronounced effects on both parasitism and immune responses, but that effect size is influenced by methodology - what is measured and when. Exactly how such effects arise and whether ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Knowles, S
Nakagawa, S
Sheldon, B
spellingShingle Knowles, S
Nakagawa, S
Sheldon, B
Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
author_facet Knowles, S
Nakagawa, S
Sheldon, B
author_sort Knowles, S
title Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
title_short Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
title_full Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
title_fullStr Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
title_full_unstemmed Elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
title_sort elevated reproductive effort increases blood parasitaemia and decreases immune function in birds: a meta-regression approach
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:bc8cb6aa-e3bb-4865-92a8-60f3a4c1da63
genre Avian Studies
genre_facet Avian Studies
op_relation doi:10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:bc8cb6aa-e3bb-4865-92a8-60f3a4c1da63
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01507.x
container_title Functional Ecology
container_volume 23
container_issue 2
container_start_page 405
op_container_end_page 415
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