Article,

Patterns of parasitism and body size in red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus)

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CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE ZOOLOGIE, 86 (2): 99-107 (February 2008)
DOI: {10.1139/Z07-123}

Abstract

Parasites use their hosts for nutrition, shelter, and even dispersal; the latter can result in sex-biased parasite distribution. Host sex-biased parasitism has been well documented in vertebrates, including mammals, and males are often more parasitized than females. Male-biased parasitism is often attributed to sexual size dimorphism, with larger animals being more parasitized. Here, we used a natural population of red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus (Erxleben, 1777)), a species without sexual size dimorphism, to test for sex-biased parasitism in ectoparasites and intestinal helminth parasites. We also tested for size-dependent parasitism to determine the importance of body size on parasitism. We predicted that males would be more parasitized and that larger individuals would be more parasitized. As well, we predicted a male-biased flea distribution on male squirrels. Parasitism fluctuated over the course of 4amonths, with flea infection peaking in August and helminth infection peaking in June. We found evidence of male-biased parasitism in helminth and ectoparasite infections. Flea infection was weakly correlated with body size in females but not in males, while no correlation was found between body size and helminth infection. Lastly, fleas had a female-biased population; however, male fleas were more likely to be found on male squirrels, and this could be to maximize dispersal to avoid inbreeding.

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