Drivers of aggregation in a novel arboreal parasite: the influence of host size and infra-populations.

Int J Parasitol

School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.

Published: February 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aenetus virescens is a unique moth species from New Zealand that spends about 6 years as a wood-boring parasite, feeding on tree phloem.
  • Researchers studied whether these moth larvae chose hosts based on quality or randomly.
  • Findings revealed that the larvae aggregate around larger host trees, supporting the target area effect rather than the ideal free distribution hypothesis.

Article Abstract

As a novel arboreal parasite, New Zealand's largest endemic moth, Aenetus virescens, is a biological oddity. With arguably the most unusual lepidopteran life history on earth, larvae grow to 100mm, spending ∼6 years as wood-boring parasites feeding on host tree phloem. Parasite fitness is a product of host suitability. Parasite discrimination between heterogeneous hosts in fragmented populations shapes parasite aggregation. We investigated whether A. virescens aggregation among hosts occurs randomly (target area effect), or if larvae select hosts based on host quality (ideal free distribution). Using long-term larval growth as an indicator of energy intake, we examined A. virescens aggregation in relation to host size and infra-population. Using a generalised linear model, the relationship between parasite intensity and host tree size was analysed. Reduced major axis regression was used to evaluate A. virescens growth after 1 year. Linear mixed-effects models inferred the influence of parasite infra-population on parasite growth, with host tree as a random factor. Results indicate parasite intensity scaled positively with host size. Furthermore, parasite growth remained consistent throughout ontogeny regardless of host size or parasite infra-population. Aenetus virescens aggregation among hosts violates the ideal free distribution hypothesis, occurring instead as a result of host size, supporting the target area effect.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2014.10.007DOI Listing

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