Sex-specific effects of experimental ectoparasite infestation on telomere length in great tit nestlings
Tschirren, B; Romero Haro, AA; Zahn, S; et al.Cricuolo, F
Date: 23 November 2020
Journal
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Publisher
Wiley / European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB)
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
Telomere length is a biomarker of biological ageing and lifespan in various vertebrate
taxa. Evidence is accumulating that telomeres shorten more rapidly when an individual
is exposed to environmental stressors. Parasites are potent selective agents that can
cause physiological stress directly or indirectly through the activation ...
Telomere length is a biomarker of biological ageing and lifespan in various vertebrate
taxa. Evidence is accumulating that telomeres shorten more rapidly when an individual
is exposed to environmental stressors. Parasites are potent selective agents that can
cause physiological stress directly or indirectly through the activation of the host’s
immune system. Yet to date, empirical evidence for a role of parasites in telomere
dynamics in natural populations is limited.
Here we show experimentally that exposure to ectoparasitic hen fleas (Ceratophyllus
gallinae) during growth results in shorter telomeres in female, but not male, great tit
(Parus major) nestlings. Females had longer telomeres than males when growing up
in experimentally deparasitized nests but, likely because of the sex-specific effects of
ectoparasitism on telomere length, this sexual dimorphism was absent in birds
growing up in experimentally infested nests. Our results provide the first experimental
evidence for a role of ectoparasitism in telomere dynamics in a natural vertebrate
population, and suggest that the costs of infection manifest in sex-specific ways.
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