Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer

By definition, parasites are expected to have fitness consequences for their hosts by reducing survival and fecundity. If such events are density dependent they may play a regulatory role in their host's dynamics. However, there are few studies in the wild that provide empirical evidence to sup...

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Main Author: Irvine, Robert Justin C
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Stirling 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21584
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/21584/1/Irvine-thesis.pdf
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spelling ftunivstirling:oai:dspace.stir.ac.uk:1893/21584 2023-05-15T18:29:46+02:00 Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer Irvine, Robert Justin C 2001 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21584 http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/21584/1/Irvine-thesis.pdf en eng University of Stirling http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21584 http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/21584/1/Irvine-thesis.pdf Reindeer Norway Parasites Thesis or Dissertation Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy 2001 ftunivstirling 2022-06-13T18:43:35Z By definition, parasites are expected to have fitness consequences for their hosts by reducing survival and fecundity. If such events are density dependent they may play a regulatory role in their host's dynamics. However, there are few studies in the wild that provide empirical evidence to support these suppositions. To understand the impact of parasites it is necessary to explore the interactions between parasite and host and the mechanisms that regulate nematode populations. The aims of this work are to: 1) identify the species specific patterns of infection; 2) investigate the interactions between and within nematode species and 3) examine the regulatory mechanisms that control nematode fecundity. The distribution of parasites between hosts and the variation between years, seasons, reindeer age and location are also examined. Nematode infections of Svalbard reindeer are dominated by two species: Ostertagia gruehneri and Marshallagia marshalli and their contrasting life-histories and population dynamics highlights the importance of investigating at the level of individual species. For 0. gruehneri, there is significant annual variation but no strong seasonal pattern in abundance. Susceptible calves do not acquire infection until their second summer. Egg output is highly seasonal with a peak in July and controlled through density dependent effects on worm development. In contrast M marshalli, shows a strong seasonal cycle which does not vary between years and the peak occurs in late winter suggesting winter transmission. Egg output is low and also confined to the winter months. The quantification of these traits is important in allowing parameterisation of models with data from the study system. In many studies parameters are estimated from studies of domestic host parasite systems and these may be inappropriate in this natural system. The role of immunity and arrested development and the relationship between transmission and environmental heterogeneity are discussed. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Svalbard svalbard reindeer University of Stirling: Stirling Digital Research Repository Norway Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection University of Stirling: Stirling Digital Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivstirling
language English
topic Reindeer Norway
Parasites
spellingShingle Reindeer Norway
Parasites
Irvine, Robert Justin C
Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
topic_facet Reindeer Norway
Parasites
description By definition, parasites are expected to have fitness consequences for their hosts by reducing survival and fecundity. If such events are density dependent they may play a regulatory role in their host's dynamics. However, there are few studies in the wild that provide empirical evidence to support these suppositions. To understand the impact of parasites it is necessary to explore the interactions between parasite and host and the mechanisms that regulate nematode populations. The aims of this work are to: 1) identify the species specific patterns of infection; 2) investigate the interactions between and within nematode species and 3) examine the regulatory mechanisms that control nematode fecundity. The distribution of parasites between hosts and the variation between years, seasons, reindeer age and location are also examined. Nematode infections of Svalbard reindeer are dominated by two species: Ostertagia gruehneri and Marshallagia marshalli and their contrasting life-histories and population dynamics highlights the importance of investigating at the level of individual species. For 0. gruehneri, there is significant annual variation but no strong seasonal pattern in abundance. Susceptible calves do not acquire infection until their second summer. Egg output is highly seasonal with a peak in July and controlled through density dependent effects on worm development. In contrast M marshalli, shows a strong seasonal cycle which does not vary between years and the peak occurs in late winter suggesting winter transmission. Egg output is low and also confined to the winter months. The quantification of these traits is important in allowing parameterisation of models with data from the study system. In many studies parameters are estimated from studies of domestic host parasite systems and these may be inappropriate in this natural system. The role of immunity and arrested development and the relationship between transmission and environmental heterogeneity are discussed.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Irvine, Robert Justin C
author_facet Irvine, Robert Justin C
author_sort Irvine, Robert Justin C
title Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
title_short Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
title_full Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
title_fullStr Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of Svalbard reindeer
title_sort contrasting life-history traits and population dynamics in two co-existing gastrointestinal nematodes of svalbard reindeer
publisher University of Stirling
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21584
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/21584/1/Irvine-thesis.pdf
geographic Norway
Svalbard
geographic_facet Norway
Svalbard
genre Svalbard
svalbard reindeer
genre_facet Svalbard
svalbard reindeer
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1893/21584
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/21584/1/Irvine-thesis.pdf
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