نتایج جستجو برای: bird parasite

تعداد نتایج: 62988  

2014
Nathan D. Burkett-Cadena Andrea M. Bingham Thomas R. Unnasch

Prevalence of arthropod-borne parasites often differs drastically between host sexes. This sex-related disparity may be related to physiological (primarily hormonal) differences that facilitate or suppress replication of the pathogen in host tissues. Alternately, differences in pathogen prevalence between host sexes may be owing to differential exposure to infected vectors. Here, we report on t...

2018
Verena Puehringer-Sturmayr Claudia A F Wascher Matthias-Claudio Loretto Rupert Palme Mareike Stoewe Kurt Kotrschal Didone Frigerio

The reproductive season is energetically costly as revealed by elevated glucocorticoid concentrations, constrained immune functions and an increased risk of infections. Social allies and affiliative interactions may buffer physiological stress responses and thereby alleviate associated effects. In the present study, we investigated the seasonal differences of immune reactive corticosterone meta...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Valerie A O'Brien Amy T Moore Ginger R Young Nicholas Komar William K Reisen Charles R Brown

Determining the effect of an invasive species on enzootic pathogen dynamics is critical for understanding both human epidemics and wildlife epizootics. Theoretical models suggest that when a naive species enters an established host-parasite system, the new host may either reduce ('dilute') or increase ('spillback') pathogen transmission to native hosts. There are few empirical data to evaluate ...

2016
Krysta H. Rogers Yvette A. Girard Leslie Woods Christine K. Johnson

Avian trichomonosis, caused by the flagellated protozoan parasite Trichomonas gallinae, has variable pathogenicity among bird species ranging from asymptomatic infections to severe disease periodically manifesting in epidemic mortality. Traditionally, columbids are identified as highly susceptible to infection with occasional spillover into raptors that prey on infected birds. We identified avi...

2006
Jesús M. Avilés Juan J. Soler Tomas Pérez-Contreras Manuel Soler Anders Pape Møller

Hosts of obligate avian brood parasites use visual cues to distinguish between their own eggs and those of the parasite. Despite major differences between human and bird vision, most previous studies on cuckoo egg mimicry estimated color matching based on human color vision. Undetected by humans, ultraviolet reflectance (UVR) may play a previously ignored role for rejection behavior in avian br...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2010
S C L Knowles V Palinauskas B C Sheldon

Avian malaria parasites (Plasmodium) occur commonly in wild birds and are an increasingly popular model system for understanding host-parasite co-evolution. However, whether these parasites have fitness consequences for hosts in endemic areas is much debated, particularly since wild-caught individuals almost always harbour chronic infections of very low parasite density. We used the anti-malari...

2015
Hafiz Allah Bachaya Muhammad Asif Raza Muhammad Ashraf Anjum Imran Ahmad Khan Abdul Aziz Zahid Manzoor Shaukat Hussain Munawar

Poultry farming not only provides high nutritious food but also creates employment opportunity for rural masses. Documented evidences elaborates that helminth parasitism is most deciduous problem of chickens especially in developing world. Ascaridia (A.) galli, a nematode of small intestine, has been considered as the most common and important parasite of chicken. The present study was carried ...

Journal: :Biology letters 2015
Iliana Medina Naomi E Langmore

Many bird species can reject foreign eggs from their nests. This behaviour is thought to have evolved in response to brood parasites, birds that lay their eggs in the nest of other species. However, not all hosts of brood parasites evict parasitic eggs. In this study, we collate data from egg rejection experiments on 198 species, and perform comparative analyses to understand the conditions und...

2012
J. L. TELLA

Parasitism has been argued as one o1 the major costs o1 breeding sociality in birds. Mowever, there is no clear evidence 1or an increased parasite pressure associated with the evolutionary transition 1rom solitary to colonial breeding. I used the pairwise comparative method to test whether colonial bird species incur in a greater risK o1 in1ection and i1 they must to 1ace with a greater diversi...

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