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Time-course of antipredator behavioral changes induced by the helminth Pomphorhynchus laevis in its intermediate host Gammarus pulex: the switch in manipulation according to parasite developmental stage differs between behaviors

View ORCID ProfileThierry Rigaud, Aude Balourdet, Alexandre Bauer
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.25.538244
Thierry Rigaud
Université de Bourgogne, Laboratoire Biogéosciences, UMR CNRS 6282, équipe Ecologie Evolutive, 6 boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon
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  • For correspondence: thierry.rigaud@u-bourgogne.fr
Aude Balourdet
Université de Bourgogne, Laboratoire Biogéosciences, UMR CNRS 6282, équipe Ecologie Evolutive, 6 boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon
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Alexandre Bauer
Université de Bourgogne, Laboratoire Biogéosciences, UMR CNRS 6282, équipe Ecologie Evolutive, 6 boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon
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Abstract

Many trophically transmitted parasites with complex life cycles manipulate their intermediate host’s antipredatory defenses in ways facilitating their transmission to final host by predation. Some parasites also protect the intermediate host from predation when noninfective during its ontogeny. The acanthocephalan Pomphorynchus laevis, a fish intestinal helminth, infecting freshwater gammarid amphipods as intermediate hosts, is using such a strategy of protection-then-exposure to predation by the definitive host. However, the whole time-course of this sequence of behavioral switch is not yet known, and only one antipredator behavior has been studied to date. Here we show that the protective part of this manipulation begins quite late during the parasite ontogeny, suggesting that the advantages overpass the costs induced by this protective manipulation only at this stage. We confirmed that the refuge use behavior is showing a switch in the few days following the stage mature for the definitive host (switching from overuse to underuse). However, such a switch was not observed for the gammarids activity rate, a behavior also known to make the host less conspicuous to predators when weak. While we predicted a low activity during early development stages, then a switch to high activity, we observed general decrease in activity during the parasite ontogeny. The possible causes for this discrepancy between behaviors are discussed. All these behavioral changes were observed mostly when animals were tested in water scented by potential predators (here brown trout), suggesting condition-dependent manipulation.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Footnotes

  • The revised version include the statement of a recommandation of this article by PCI Zoology on the tittle page.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 14, 2023.
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Time-course of antipredator behavioral changes induced by the helminth Pomphorhynchus laevis in its intermediate host Gammarus pulex: the switch in manipulation according to parasite developmental stage differs between behaviors
Thierry Rigaud, Aude Balourdet, Alexandre Bauer
bioRxiv 2023.04.25.538244; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.25.538244
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Time-course of antipredator behavioral changes induced by the helminth Pomphorhynchus laevis in its intermediate host Gammarus pulex: the switch in manipulation according to parasite developmental stage differs between behaviors
Thierry Rigaud, Aude Balourdet, Alexandre Bauer
bioRxiv 2023.04.25.538244; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.25.538244

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