Latitudinal influence on gametogenesis and host–parasite ecology in a marine bivalve model
Langue
EN
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Ecology and Evolution. 2021-05-02, vol. 11, n° 11, p. 7029-7041
Résumé en anglais
Reproduction and parasites have significant impacts on marine animal populations
globally. This study aimed to investigate the associative effects of host reproduction
and a host–parasite
interplay on a marine bivalve, ...Lire la suite >
Reproduction and parasites have significant impacts on marine animal populations
globally. This study aimed to investigate the associative effects of host reproduction
and a host–parasite
interplay on a marine bivalve, along a geographic gradient of
latitude. Cockles Cerastoderma edule were sampled from five European sites (54°N
to 40°N), between April 2018 and October 2019. A histological survey provided data
on trematode (metacercaria and sporocyst life stages), prevalence, and cockle stage
of gametogenesis to assess the influence of a latitudinal gradient on both interplays.
Sex ratios at the northernmost sites were skewed toward females, and spawning
size was reduced at the lower latitudes. Trematode infection did not follow a latitudinal
gradient. Localized site-related
drivers, namely seawater temperature, varied
spatially, having an impact on cockle–trematode
interactions. Spawning was related
to elevated temperatures at all sites. Prolonged spawning occurred at southern latitudes,
where seawater temperatures were warmer. Trematode prevalence and the
impact of trematodes on gametogenesis were found to be spatially variable, but not
latitudinally. Therefore, it is not possible to determine the likelihood of boom and
bust events in cockles, based on the latitudinal location of a population. In terms of
sublethal impacts, it appeared that energy was allocated to reproduction rather than
somatic growth in southern populations, with less energy allocated to reproduction
in the larger, northern cockles. The demonstrated spatial trend of energy allocation
indicates the potential of a temporal trend of reduced cockle growth at northern
sites, as a result of warming sea temperatures. This awareness of the spatially varying
drivers of populations is crucial considering the potential for these drivers/inhibitors
to be exacerbated in a changing marine environment.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
boom and bust
cockles
fisheries
latitude
parasite–host interactions
reproduction
shellfish
spatial variation
trematodes