AI Article Synopsis

  • * The study found that different groups of nematomorphs targeted specific arthropod hosts, leading to a seasonal supply of prey for salmonids: ground beetles in spring and orthopterans in autumn.
  • * The findings suggest that a variety of host-parasite relationships can affect energy transfer across ecosystems, indicating that such dynamics may be prevalent in nature.

Article Abstract

Nematomorph parasites manipulate terrestrial arthropods to enter streams where the parasites reproduce. These manipulated arthropods become a substantial prey subsidy for stream salmonids, causing cross-ecosystem energy flow. Diverse nematomorph-arthropod associations underlie the energy flow, but it remains unknown whether they can mediate the magnitude and temporal attributes of the energy flow. Here, we investigated whether distinct phylogenetic groups of nematomorphs manipulate different arthropod hosts and mediate seasonal prey subsidy for stream salmonids. The results of our molecular-based diagnoses show that and nematomorphs infected ground beetle and orthopteran hosts, respectively. The presumable ground beetle hosts subsidized salmonid individuals in spring, whereas the presumable orthopteran hosts did so in autumn. Maintaining the two distinct nematomorph-arthropod associations thus resulted in the parasite-mediated prey subsidy in both spring and autumn in the study streams. Manipulative parasites are common, and often associated with a range of host lineages, suggesting that similar effects of phylogenetic variation in host-parasite associations on energy flow might be widespread in nature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11252854PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2024.0065DOI Listing

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