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EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION WITH A NATURALLY OCCURRING PROTOZOAN PARASITE REDUCES MONARCH BUTTERFLY () MATING SUCCESS. | LitMetric

EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION WITH A NATURALLY OCCURRING PROTOZOAN PARASITE REDUCES MONARCH BUTTERFLY () MATING SUCCESS.

J Parasitol

Department of Biology, O. Wayne Rollins Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322.

Published: July 2022

Parasitic infection is known to drive sexual selection in persuasive mating systems, where parasites influence the secondary sexual characteristics that underlie mate choice. However, comparatively little is known about their effects on animals that use coercive mating behavior. We use a tractable system consisting of monarch butterflies and their naturally occurring parasite to test how parasites influence host mating dynamics when males force females to copulate. Monarchs were placed in mating cages where all, half, or no individuals were experimentally infected with . We found that parasites reduce a male's mating success such that infected males were not only less likely to copulate but obtained fewer lifetime copulations as well. This reduction in mating success was due primarily to the fact that infected males attempt to mate significantly less than uninfected males. However, we found that did not influence male mate choice. Males chose to mate with both infected and uninfected females at similar rates, regardless of their infection status. Overall, our data highlight how mating dynamics in coercive systems are particularly vulnerable to parasites.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9235863PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1645/21-121DOI Listing

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