Present Address: Natural History Museum, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA.
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Does behavioural flexibility facilitate host switching by parasites?
Article first published online: 21 MAY 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01535.x
© 2009 The Author. Journal compilation © 2009 British Ecological Society
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How to Cite
Bush, S. E. (2009), Does behavioural flexibility facilitate host switching by parasites?. Functional Ecology, 23: 578–586. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01535.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 21 MAY 2009
- Article first published online: 21 MAY 2009
- Received 21 August 2008; accepted 5 December 2008; Handling Editor: Ken Wilson
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Keywords:
- behavioural plasticity;
- host-specificity;
- pigeons;
- doves;
- lice;
- Harrison's rule;
- Phthiraptera;
- Ischnocera
Summary
- 1Baldwin (1896) suggested that behavioural flexibility could allow organisms to persist in novel environments, thus buying time for the evolution of genetic adaptations to the new environment. This has proven true for free-living organisms invading novel habitats. Behavioural flexibility could also allow parasites to exploit novel hosts, but this hypothesis has not been tested, despite the fact that parasitism is one of the most common lifestyles on earth.
- 2In this study, I compare the behavioural flexibility of two relatively host specific groups of feather lice (Phthiraptera: Ischnocera) that parasitize pigeons and doves: ‘wing’ lice (Columbicola columbae and C. passerinae) and ‘body’ lice (Campanulotes compar and Physconelloides eurysema).
- 3Wing and body lice are similar in many aspects of their natural history, but they differ in their relationship to host body size. Wing louse size is tightly correlated with host body size, whereas body louse size is not. Even so, experiments have shown that wing lice can establish on different sized novel hosts just as well as body lice.
- 4Behavioural flexibility may facilitate the establishment of wing lice on different sized novel hosts. To test this hypothesis, I experimentally transferred wing and body lice to a series of different sized novel host species. Once the louse populations established (two generations) I compared the microhabitat preferences of wing and body lice on novel hosts vs. native host controls.
- 5Wing lice shifted their microhabitat use on novel host species, and the magnitude of the shift was correlated with host size. In contrast, body lice rarely shifted microhabitat and when they did, the shift was not correlated with host size.
- 6Behavioural flexibility may play a pivotal role in the ability of wing lice to establish on different sized novel host species, and could be an important factor for other parasites faced with novel hosts.

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