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Tell me who you go with and I will tell you what you do: Antarctic seal lice behave differently
被引:2
|作者:
Soto, Florencia Anabella
[1
]
Crespo, Jose Emilio
[2
]
Negrete, Javier
[3
,4
]
Leonardi, Maria Soledad
[1
]
机构:
[1] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, Inst Biol Organismos Marinos IBIOMAR, Blvd Brown 2915, RA-U9120ACD Puerto Madryn, Chubut, Argentina
[2] Univ Buenos Aires, Inst Ecol Genet & Evoluc IEGEBA, Ciudad Univ, RA-C1428EGA Buenos Aires, Argentina
[3] Univ Nacl La Plata, Fac Ciencias Nat & Museo, Ave 122 & 60, RA-1900 La Plata, Argentina
[4] Inst Antart Argentino, Dept Biol Predadores Tope, PC 1010, RA-1248 Buenos Aires, Argentina
关键词:
Antarctophthirus carlinii;
Antarctophthirus lobodontis;
Leptonychotes weddellii;
Lobodon carcinophaga;
CRAB-EATER SEALS;
WEDDELL SEAL;
ANOPLURA-ECHINOPHTHIRIIDAE;
LEPTONYCHOTES-WEDDELLII;
FORAGING BEHAVIOR;
HABITAT USE;
ECOLOGY;
D O I:
10.1007/s00227-023-04386-y
中图分类号:
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号:
071004 ;
摘要:
Lice of the family Echinophthiriidae are obligate and permanent ectoparasites of pinnipeds and sea otters. Morphological, ecological, and behavioral adaptations have enabled them to survive in their amphibian hosts. However, it has been shown experimentally that the eggs do not survive submerged. This physiological limitation restricts their reproductive events to the terrestrial periods of their hosts, mainly during molting and reproduction. We studied the reproductive strategies of Antarctophthirus lobodontis on crabeater seals (CS, n = 54) and A. carlinii on Weddell seals (WS, n = 54) from Danco Coast, Antarctic Peninsula, during the molting season. Lice were sexed and classified as adults or nymphs under a stereomicroscope. The 20.37% of the CS had potentially viable eggs and all the nymphal stages and adults. However, in the WS, we only found N3 and adults. Our results would suggest that A. lobodontis lays viable eggs that can survive immersion. Instead, the transmission of A. carlinii would be mainly by adults. According to previous studies, A. carlinii would reproduce during the reproductive season of WS. These reproductive strategies of seal lice would be related to the life history of their host, mainly to diving behavior and the haul-out patterns during their life cycle, reflecting the strong co-adaptation and co-evolution mechanisms between seals and lice. The differences in the population structure of the two species observed here may indicate that they are different species, or at least that they have undergone different co-evolutionary processes depending on the habit of their hosts.
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