幼年大麻哈魚能夠?qū)⒂憛挼暮J瓊魅窘o獵食它的大魚,。
(圖片提供:Alexandra Morton)
讓我們來談?wù)労J?ldquo;勝利大逃亡”。這是一種讓大麻哈魚備受折磨的寄生甲殼綱動物,。然而當(dāng)它們的宿主被其他大魚吃掉后,,這些寄生動物卻會“棄船上岸”,在食肉魚類身上“安營扎寨”,。研究人員最近在《生物學(xué)快報》網(wǎng)絡(luò)版上報告說,,這種之前未被認(rèn)識的逃亡策略對于整個食物鏈而言絕對是一個壞消息。
由于大規(guī)模的漁業(yè)養(yǎng)殖,海虱的傳播在加拿大不列顛哥倫比亞省的海域已經(jīng)失去控制,。緊密而擁擠的魚籠是這種寄生動物繁殖的溫床,,它們會吃掉宿主的皮膚、肌肉和血液,,并且頻繁地在那些幼年野生大麻哈魚群之間傳播,。正是由于這一原因,野生大麻哈魚被海虱感染的速度正在飛速上升,,甚至導(dǎo)致一些大麻哈魚種群瀕臨滅絕,。
由加拿大伯納比市西蒙·弗雷澤大學(xué)的行為生態(tài)學(xué)家Brendan Connors領(lǐng)導(dǎo)的一個研究小組如今發(fā)現(xiàn),海虱的傳播技能比人們想象的更為強(qiáng)大,。研究人員讓未被海虱感染的食肉魚類——銀大麻哈魚和山鱒——與兩條幼年大麻哈魚待在一起,,后者中一條被海虱感染而另一條未被感染。當(dāng)食肉魚類吃掉其中的一條大麻哈魚后,,研究人員對前者是否被海虱感染進(jìn)行了檢查,。結(jié)果發(fā)現(xiàn),食肉魚類如果吃的是未被感染的大麻哈魚,,則其自身也安然無事,;如果吃掉了被感染的大麻哈魚,則食肉魚類被感染的幾率為70%——海虱會跑到它們的新宿主身上,,這一過程用肉眼都可以觀察到,。Connors表示:“這太讓人吃驚啦!”他說:“這些海虱會從大麻哈魚的身上準(zhǔn)確地‘蹦’到捕食者的眼睛附近,。”
與雌海虱相比,,會有更多的雄海虱逃離它們的宿主,這一發(fā)現(xiàn)讓蒙彼利埃市法國國立研究所的寄生生物學(xué)家Frédéric Thomas感到尤為困惑,。他說,,這種情況,即雄性能夠逃脫死亡而雌性大量死亡,,在進(jìn)化上只有死路一條,。
英國阿伯丁大學(xué)的漁業(yè)生物學(xué)家Alan Pike強(qiáng)調(diào),,這些海虱只能在大麻哈魚身上存活,,這其中包括大麻哈魚和鱒魚。如果逃亡的海虱落到了錯誤的捕食者身上,,它也是無法生存的。Pike想知道的是,,海虱在這樣惡劣的環(huán)境下究竟如何生存,。
Connors認(rèn)為,海虱的救命一跳表明,,漁業(yè)養(yǎng)殖場不但會被幼年野生大麻哈魚所傳染,甚至還會被最終吃掉它們的食肉魚類所感染,。他說:“我們尚沒有考慮這些海虱在食物鏈中的傳播情況,。”(生物谷bioon.com)
生物谷推薦原始出處:
Biology Letters,10.1098/rsbl.2008.0276,,B.M. Connors, M. Krko?ek, L.M. Dill
Sea lice escape predation on their host
B.M. Connors1, M. Krkošek2, L.M. Dill1
1Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5A 1S6
2 Center for Mathematical Biology, Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alta, Canada T6G 2E7
摘要
Parasites seldom have predators but often fall victim to those of their hosts. How parasites respond to host predation can have important consequences for both hosts and parasites, though empirical investigations are rare. The exposure of wild juvenile salmon to sea lice (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) from salmon farms allowed us to study a novel ecological interaction: the response of sea lice to predation on their juvenile pink and chum salmon hosts by two salmonid predators—coho smolts and cut-throat trout. In approximately 70% of trials in which a predator consumed a parasitized prey, lice escaped predation by swimming or moving directly onto the predator. This trophic transmission is strongly male biased, probably because behaviour and morphology constrain female movement and transmission. These findings highlight the potential for sea lice to be transmitted up marine food webs in areas of intensive salmon aquaculture, with implications for louse population dynamics and predatory salmonid health.