Background: Introduced parasites are a particular threat to small populations of hosts living on islands because extinction can occur before hosts have a chance to evolve effective defenses. An experimental approach in which parasite abundance is manipulated in the field can be the most informative means of assessing a parasite's impact on the host. The parasitic fly Philornis downsi, recently introduced to the Galápagos Islands, feeds on nestling Darwin's finches and other land birds. Several correlational studies, and one experimental study of mixed species over several years, reported that the flies reduce host fitness. Here we report the results of a larger scale experimental study of a single species at a single site over a single breeding season.
Methodology/principal Findings: We manipulated the abundance of flies in the nests of medium ground finches (Geospiza fortis) and quantified the impact of the parasites on nestling growth and fledging success. We used nylon nest liners to reduce the number of parasites in 24 nests, leaving another 24 nests as controls. A significant reduction in mean parasite abundance led to a significant increase in the number of nests that successfully fledged young. Nestlings in parasite-reduced nests also tended to be larger prior to fledging.
Conclusions/significance: Our results confirm that P. downsi has significant negative effects on the fitness of medium ground finches, and they may pose a serious threat to other species of Darwin's finches. These data can help in the design of management plans for controlling P. downsi in Darwin's finch breeding populations.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3092749 | PMC |
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0019706 | PLOS |
Natural hybridisation among rare or endangered species and stable congenerics is increasingly topical for the conservation of species-level diversity under anthropogenic impacts. Evidence for beneficial genes being introgressed into or selected for in hybrids raises concurrent questions about its evolutionary significance. In Darwin's tree finches on the island of Floreana (Galapagos Islands, Ecuador), the Critically Endangered medium tree finch () undergoes introgression with the stable small tree finch (), and hybrids regularly backcross with Earlier studies in 2005-2013 documented an increase in the frequency of hybridisation on Floreana using field-based and microsatellite data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
October 2024
Graduate Program in Organismic & Evolutionary Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003, USA.
Anaesthesia
November 2024
National Insitute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre, University College, London, UK.
Background: Critical care beds are a limited resource, yet research indicates that recommendations for postoperative critical care admission based on patient-level risk stratification are not followed. It is unclear how prioritisation decisions are made in real-world settings and the effect of this prioritisation on outcomes.
Methods: This was a prespecified analysis of an observational cohort study of adult patients undergoing inpatient surgery, conducted in 274 hospitals across the UK and Australasia during 2017.
Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces
January 2025
Beijing Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China; Academy of Military Medical Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China. Electronic address:
One hundred and sixty-five years ago, Charles Darwin's observations of homologous structures in finch beaks laid the groundwork for evolutionary biology. Today, his evolutionary theory has been extended to the microscopic scale, where homologous structures in viral capsids reveal pathogen-associated geometric pattern (PAGP). PAGP is the highly conserved geometric signature characteristic of an entire class of microbes like viruses or bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSyst Biol
July 2024
Department of Computational Biology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Popular comparative phylogenetic models such as Brownian Motion, Ornstein-Ulhenbeck, and their extensions, assume that, at speciation, a trait value is inherited identically by two descendant species. This assumption contrasts with models of speciation at a micro-evolutionary scale where descendants' phenotypic distributions are sub-samples of the ancestral distribution. Different speciation mechanisms can lead to a displacement of the ancestral phenotypic mean among descendants and an asymmetric inheritance of the ancestral phenotypic variance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!