3299
The Journal of Experimental Biology 213, 3299-3304
© 2010. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd
doi:10.1242/jeb.046565
Host gender and offspring quality in a flea parasitic on a rodent
Irina S. Khokhlova1, Vahan Serobyan1, A. Allan Degen1 and Boris R. Krasnov2,*
1
Desert Animal Adaptations and Husbandry, Wyler Department of Dryland Agriculture, French Associates Institute for Agriculture
and Biotechnology of Drylands, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Sede-Boqer
Campus, 84990 Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Israel and 2Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology, Institute for Dryland Environmental
Research, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Sede-Boqer Campus, 84990
Midreshet Ben-Gurion, Israel
*Author for correspondence (
[email protected])
Accepted 4 July 2010
SUMMARY
The quality of offspring produced by parent fleas (Xenopsylla ramesis) fed on either male or female rodent hosts (Meriones
crassus) was studied. The emergence success, duration of development, resistance to starvation upon emergence and body size
of the flea offspring were measured. It was predicted that offspring of fleas produced by parents that fed on male hosts (i) will
survive better as pre-imago, (ii) will develop faster, (iii) will live longer under starvation after emergence and (iv) will be larger than
offspring of fleas fed on female hosts. The emergence success of pre-imaginal fleas was relatively high, ranging from 46.9% to
100.0% and averaging 78.4±3.0%, and was not affected by host gender. The duration of development of pre-imaginal fleas
depended on the gender of the host of parents and differed between male and female offspring, with female fleas developing
faster. Furthermore, male fleas developed faster if their parents fed on female rather than on male hosts, whereas no difference in
the duration of development between host genders was found in female fleas. The time to death under starvation did not depend
on the gender of either the flea or the host. A newly emerged flea, on average, lived 31.9±1.0 days without access to food. The
relationship between host gender and body size of male flea offspring was the only effect that supported the predictions. An
increase in body size in male fleas could increase their mating success and, ultimately, their fitness.
Key words: body size, development, ectoparasitism, fleas, gender, host quality.
INTRODUCTION
The host spectrum of a parasite is thought to be a result of two
independent forces described by Combes (Combes, 2001) as the hostencounter and the host-compatibility filters. The former excludes all
hosts that a parasite cannot encounter because of ecological or
geographic reasons, whereas the latter excludes all hosts in which a
parasite cannot survive and develop for morphological, physiological
or immunological reasons. Although this concept has initially been
proposed to explain among-parasite variation in the number of hosts
exploited, it might also be adapted to other aspects and scales of
host–parasite relationships. For example, variation among host
individuals in their level of infection is well known, suggesting that
some individuals might represent better patches for parasites than
other individuals (for a review, see Poulin, 2007).
The theory of habitat selection (Rosenzweig, 1981) has been
found to be equally applicable to both free-living and parasitic
species (Kelly et al., 1996; Krasnov et al., 2003a) (but see Sukhdeo
et al., 2002). According to this theory, a selection of a patch by a
consumer is based on the among-patch differences in either amount
of resources or pattern of resource acquisition or both because
exploitation of a patch with a higher amount or more efficient
acquisition of resources would provide a higher fitness reward
(Rosenzweig, 1981; Morris, 2003). Given that variation among
conspecific hosts in the amount of the resources they can provide
for a parasite is obviously small, the main among-host differences
that affect host selection by a parasite should be frequency of
encounter and/or the degree of anti-parasitic defences.
Males of higher vertebrates are usually more mobile than females
(e.g. Tew and Macdonald, 1994) and their immunological anti-
parasitic defences are usually weaker than those of females owing
to immunosuppressive effects of androgens (Folstad and Karter,
1992; Olsen and Kovacs, 1996; Cox and Henry, 2007) (but see Klein
et al., 1997). Consequently, male hosts are characterized by a higher
probability to encounter a parasite and higher compatibility to a
parasite than females. As a result, higher infestation of male than
female hosts in terms of abundance, prevalence and species richness
of parasites has been reported for a great variety of parasite and
host taxa (Zuk and McKean, 1996; Poulin, 1996; Schalk and Forbes,
1997; Hughes and Randolph, 2001; Tschirren et al., 2003; Ferrari
et al., 2004; Morand et al., 2004; Krasnov et al., 2005a; Hoby et
al., 2006; Gorrell and Schulte-Hostedde, 2008; Matthee et al., 2010),
although higher levels of parasite infection have been reported for
females in some birds and mammals (McCurdy et al., 1998;
Morales-Montor et al., 2004; Krasnov et al., 2005a).
Hypotheses explaining the mechanisms of male-biased parasitism
have been tested frequently. The majority of experimental
investigations were host-focused (Klein et al., 1997; Klein, 2000;
Oppliger et al., 2004), but the parasite responses to the host gender
have usually been ignored [the exception is Tschirren et al.
(Tschirren et al., 2007)]. However, the effect of host gender on the
parasite performance is crucial for understanding the mechanisms
of male-biased parasitism.
Recently, we studied feeding and reproductive performance of
the flea Xenopsylla ramesis Rothschild when exploiting males and
females of its rodent host Meriones crassus Sundevall (Khokhlova
et al., 2009a; Khokhlova et al., 2009b). We found that, in general,
fleas fed faster, took relatively more blood and digested it faster
when they fed on a male rather than on a female host, although the
THEJOURNALOFEXPERIMENTALBIOLOGY
3300 I. S. Khokhlova and others
host gender-related pattern of blood digestion depended on external
conditions (relative humidity). Moreover, fleas exploiting male hosts
produced more eggs than fleas exploiting female hosts. These results
suggested that the gender difference in immune defence is an
important (albeit not the only) mechanism behind male-biased
parasitism. However, from an evolutionary perspective, it is the net
result of the reproductive effort that matters. The most important
outcome in reproduction of a flea is how many second-generation
imagos emerge and how many of them produce offspring of the
third generation, whereas the egg-productive ability of a parent
female is of secondary importance. In other words, host gender might
affect not only the quantity but also the quality of the offspring of
parasites. This effect has never been tested.
Here, we studied the quality of the offspring of fleas (X. ramesis)
produced by parents parasitizing either male or female rodents
(M. crassus). We used emergence success, duration of
development, resistance to starvation upon emergence and body
size as proxies for the quality of flea offspring. We assumed that
a higher emergence success indicates a higher quality of offspring
because it mirrors the mortality of pre-imaginal fleas. In addition,
the quality of the offspring might be associated with their ability
to compete with offspring of other females for larval food
(Krasnov et al., 2005b). Furthermore, older flea larvae often
cannibalize younger larvae (Lawrence and Foil, 2002), and earlieremerging fleas probably have a higher probability to find a host.
This suggests that a shorter duration of pre-imaginal development
of a flea might be an indicator of its higher quality, all else being
equal. The resistance to starvation in newly emerged imagos is
another proxy of their quality because, when a flea emerges from
a cocoon, it possesses energy storage in fat tissue. This energy
allows the newly emerged flea to survive until it has an opportunity
to attack a host. Thus, the ability of a newly emerged imago to
survive unpredictable and sometimes lengthy periods without a
blood meal is extremely important. Finally, body size might be
considered as an additional indicator of the quality of a flea because
larger body size is intraspecifically associated with higher
fecundity in insects (Honek, 1993), although this has never been
studied in fleas. We predicted that the offspring of fleas produced
by parents parasitizing male hosts (i) will survive better as preimago, (ii) will develop faster, (iii) will live longer under starvation
after emergence and (iv) will be larger than offspring of fleas
parasitizing female hosts.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Rodents and fleas
We used rodents (Meriones crassus) and fleas (Xenopsylla ramesis)
from our laboratory colonies established in 1997 and 1999,
respectively. Details on the maintenance and breeding of rodents
and fleas have been reported earlier (e.g. Krasnov et al., 2001a;
Krasnov et al., 2001b; Krasnov et al., 2002a; Krasnov et al., 2002b;
Krasnov et al., 2004; Krasnov et al., 2007; Krasnov et al., 2008a;
Khokhlova et al., 2009a; Khokhlova et al., 2009b). In brief, rodents
were maintained in plastic cages [60⫻50⫻(40/20)cm] and offered
millet seed and alfalfa (Medicago sp.) leaves ad libitum. To obtain
fleas, an individual rodent host was placed in a cage that contained
a steel nest box with a screen floor and a pan containing a mixture
of sand and dried bovine blood. This rodent was infested with 10–15
newly emerged fleas. Every two weeks, we collected all substrate
and bedding material from the cage and transferred them into an
incubator (FOC225E, Velp Scientifica, Milano, Italy), where flea
development and emergence took place at a temperature of 25°C
and relative humidity (RH) of 75%.
Experimental procedures
The procedures used for flea feeding and collection of flea eggs
have been described in detail by Khokhlova and colleagues
(Khokhlova et al., 2009a). A rodent was placed in a wire-mesh tube
(5mm ⫻ 5mm mesh, 15cm length and 5cm diameter) that did not
allow self-grooming. Thirty newly emerged starving X. ramesis (20
females and 10 males) were placed on each rodent and were allowed
to feed for 60min. This procedure was repeated for each group of
fleas on the same host individual every day for eight consecutive
days. Between feedings, each group of fleas was maintained in
plastic cups (200cm2) with a bottom covered by a thin layer of sand
and small pieces of filter paper at an air temperature of 25°C and
RH of 92–95%.
Eggs were obtained from 10 flea groups fed on male hosts and
10 flea groups fed on female hosts. Every day (starting from the
third day of feeding and during five consecutive days), pieces of
filter paper from each plastic cup with fleas were examined under
a light microscope. These eggs were placed individually in 20ml
glass vials that contained a 3mm layer of sand and larval food
medium (94% dry bovine blood, 5% millet flour and 1% ground
excrements of M. crassus) and were covered by perforated lids. Vials
were then maintained at an air temperature of 25°C and RH of 92%.
Temperature was regulated in refrigerated incubators (FOC225E,
Velp Scientifica, Milano, Italy) and humidity was regulated in 38cm
⫻ 23cm ⫻ 13cm acrylic humidity chambers using saturated salt
solutions. Temperature and humidity were monitored using a
Fisherbrand Traceable Humidity/Temperature Pen with Memory
(Fisher Scientific International, NJ, USA).
The daily amount of food (larvae medium) required for successful
development of flea larvae was determined earlier as 0.07±0.1mg
per individual larva (Krasnov et al., 2005b), while the longest
duration of the larval stage in X. ramesis at an air temperature of
25°C and RH of 92% was 12 days (Krasnov et al., 2001b). To ensure
an excess of food for each larva, the amount of larval medium added
to each vial was calculated as the necessary daily amount times the
maximum duration of larval stage and then tripled – that is, ca.
2.5mg. The minimal duration of metamorphosis (i.e. from egg to
adult) of X. ramesis at an air temperature of 25°C and RH of 92%
found in our earlier studies was 25 days (Krasnov et al., 2001b).
Consequently, starting from the eighteenth day after an egg was
produced, we checked each vial twice a day (at 08:00 and at 20:00)
until either an adult emerged or for 60 consecutive days. Then, vials
with newly emerged adults were checked twice a day until all the
adults died. After the death of each imago, we identified its sex by
examination of its genitalia using light microscopy.
After the death of adults, we randomly selected 30 male and 30
female fleas produced by parents from either male or female hosts
and estimated their body size. We used maximal length of the right
hind femur of each dead adult as a measure of its body size. The
use of a direct measure of body size (e.g. body length) of a dead
adult was not possible because the body shape of a flea could be
distorted after starvation and desiccation [see Fielden et al. (Fielden
et al., 2002) for details of water balance in X. ramesis]. The distortion
of the body size of a flea after loss of fat tissue and water arises
because the flea thoracic and abdominal segments do not possess
posterior walls; consequently, the joints of the thorax and abdomen
are highly flexible (Medvedev and Krasnov, 2006). Moreover, the
body length of fleas can vary with pressure applied to the specimens
when preparing them between slides and cover-slides, resulting in
body length being an inaccurate indicator of body size (Tripet et
al., 2002). By contrast, morphometrics of the locomotory apparatus
in fresh X. ramesis demonstrated that femur length is a reliable
THEJOURNALOFEXPERIMENTALBIOLOGY
Effect of host gender on flea offspring
3301
indicator of body size because these traits were strongly correlated
[R20.51, F1,6164.7, P<0.01; data from Krasnov and colleagues
(Krasnov et al., 2003b)]. Femur length was measured on-screen,
using a digital microscope camera (Moticam 2000 with the Motic
Images Plus 2.0ML program; Motic, Speed Fair, Causeway Bay,
Hong Kong), to the nearest 0.01mm at a magnification of ⫻40 and
calibrated using an object-micrometer.
The experimental design was found to be suitable and to meet
the requirements of the 1994 Law for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (Experiments on Animals) of the State of Israel (BenGurion University Committee for the Ethical Care and Use of
Animals in Experiments, License IL-36-9-2007).
variables of duration of development, time to death under starvation
and femur length size, with the identification number of a rodent
as an independent factor. No between-host individual difference was
found in any of the parameters (F16,901.2–1.8, P>0.1 for all) – that
is, no block effect for any parameter was found. Consequently,
duration of development, time to death under starvation and body
size were analyzed using two-way ANCOVAs, with host gender
and flea gender as independent variables and egg production effort
of a parent female as a covariate. The latter was estimated as the
mean number of eggs produced by a flea in a group of 20 parent
females.
Data analysis
In total, we obtained 1479 flea eggs, from which 1159 imagos
emerged. Emergence success of pre-imaginal fleas was relatively
high, ranging between 46.9% and 100.0% and averaging 78.4±3.0%.
No effect of host gender on the emergence success of preimaginal
fleas was found (F1,181.1, P0.31). The sex ratio of newly emerged
fleas was highly variable among host individuals, with the proportion
of newly emerged females ranging between 21.4% and 71.4%. In
general, the ratio deviated significantly, albeit weakly, from unity
(meta-analysis; Z2.77, P0.006), with the proportion of females
averaging 53.0% (confidence limits from 51.0 to 55.9%). The
proportion of females among newly emerged fleas did not differ
significantly between host genders of parent fleas (F1,182.4,
P0.13).
A summary of ANCOVAs of duration of development, time of
survival under starvation and femur size of male and female flea
offspring from parents parasitizing male and female hosts is presented
in Table1. The duration of development of flea offspring depended
on the gender of the host on which their parents fed and differed
between male and female offspring, with female fleas developing
faster (Tukey’s honest significant difference tests, P<0.05; Fig.1).
Furthermore, interaction between the two independent factors was
significant, indicating a differential effect of host gender on the
duration of development between male and female offspring. Indeed,
comparison of within-flea gender and between-host gender
demonstrates that male fleas developed faster if their parents fed on
female rather than on male hosts, whereas no difference in the
duration of development between host genders was found in female
fleas (Fig.1). The time to death under starvation conditions did not
depend on either flea or host gender, and the interaction between the
RESULTS
We estimated the emergence success of pre-imaginal fleas as the
proportion of eggs that survived until emergence as an imago for
each group of 20 female fleas fed simultaneously on a rodent. In
addition, we calculated the proportion of emerged female offspring
for each group of parent females. The duration of development was
calculated for each egg that developed successfully to an imago as
the time from oviposition of that egg to emergence. The resistance
to starvation of a newly emerged flea was calculated as the time
from emergence to death. Before analyses, proportional variables
were arcsin transformed, whereas time and size variables were log
transformed (figures present untransformed data). Transformed
variables did not deviate significantly from normality
(Kolmogorov–Smirnov d0.06–0.08, P>0.20 for all).
We analyzed survival and the proportion of emerged females
using ANOVAs, with host gender as an independent variable. To
test for deviation of sex ratio of newly emerged fleas from the
expected 1:1 ratio, we calculated the odds ratio of proportions of
emerged male and female fleas for each group of 20 parent females
parasitizing the same rodent individual. Then, to evaluate the general
trend of sex ratio, we applied the meta-analyses of the odds ratios
across groups of parent fleas. Meta-analyses that used both fixedand random-effects models produced similar results. Here, we
report results of analyses that used the fixed-effects model only.
Meta-analyses were performed using the computer program
Comprehensive Meta-Analysis 2.2 (Biostat, Englewood, NJ, USA).
Because we fed a group of parent fleas on the same host
individual, we needed to account for within-host non-independence
of flea offspring. To do this, we initially performed ANOVAs for
Table 1. Summary of ANCOVAs of the effect of host gender (HG) and flea gender (FG) on duration of development, time to death under
starvation and length of the right-hind femur of fleas (X. ramesis) produced by parents fed on male and female rodent hosts (M. crassus)
Dependent variable
Duration of development
Time to death under starvation
Femur length
Effect
Sum of squares
d.f.
F
P
RE
HG
FG
HG ⫻ FG
Error
RE
HG
FG
HG ⫻ FG
Error
RE
HG
FG
HG ⫻ FG
Error
0.14
0.04
0.49
0.03
0.36
0.24
0.01
0.02
0.06
2.34
0.001
0.005
0.12
0.01
0.09
1
1
1
1
1149
1
1
1
1
1149
1
1
1
1
115
34.9
9.1
351.4
64.0
<0.001
<0.01
<0.001
<0.001
9.2
0.13
0.8
2.39.3
<0.01
0.71
0.38
0.12
0.62
5.1
116.5
4.3
0.03
<0.001
0.04
Reproductive effort (RE) of parent female was included as a covariate.
THEJOURNALOFEXPERIMENTALBIOLOGY
3302 I. S. Khokhlova and others
0.45
45
0.40
Length of femur (mm)
Duration of development (days)
50
40
35
30
0.35
0.30
25
20
Females
Males
0.25
Females
Males
Fig.1. Means (±s.e.m.) for the duration of development from egg to imago
of male and female X. ramesis from parents fed on male (black columns)
and female (white columns) M. crassus. The values are adjusted means
after removal of the effect of parent reproductive effort in ANCOVA.
Fig.2. Means (±s.e.m.) for the length of the hind right-femur of newly
emerged male and female X. ramesis from parents fed on male (black
columns) and female (white columns) M. crassus. The values are adjusted
means after removal of the effect of parent reproductive effort in ANCOVA.
two factors was non-significant (Table1). A newly emerged flea, on
average, lived 31.9±1.0 days without access to food.
Female fleas from parents parasitizing male and female hosts did
not differ significantly in femur length (Fig.2), whereas the femurs
of males from parents parasitizing male hosts were significantly
longer than those of males from parents parasitizing female hosts
(Fig.2). In general, female fleas were significantly larger than male
fleas based on femur lengths.
Indeed, the higher mobility of male compared with female rodents
(e.g. Heske et al., 1995) could be the reason behind the higher
abundance of fleas in males, but, first, it is not characteristic for M.
crassus in our study region (Krasnov et al., 1996) and, second, it
cannot explain the quality difference between fleas produced
by parents exploiting either male or female hosts. The
immunocompetence explanation is also supported by the fact that
lower immune abilities in male compared with female M. crassus
were found in laboratory studies (Khokhlova et al., 2004). In
particular, females possessed higher levels of circulating immune
complexes than males, indicating higher synthesis of antibodies
(Khokhlova et al., 2004). This difference could cause fleas to digest
blood from a female host more slowly than blood from a male host
(Khokhlova et al., 2009b). In fleas, a faster rate of digestion was
found to be associated with lower energy expenditure for digestion
(Krasnov et al., 2003c; Sarfati et al., 2005). Consequently, feeding
on male blood might allow fleas to allocate more energy for other
activities such as egg production (Khokhlova et al., 2009a).
However, parasitizing either a male or a female host did not affect
the viability of the eggs, as was indicated by the similar emergence
success for young fleas.
Nevertheless, male fleas from parents fed on male hosts took
longer to develop than those from parents fed on female hosts. On
the one hand, this might indicate lower quality of the former due
to costs of delayed reproduction or increased risk of intraspecific
cannibalism (Zonneveld, 1996; Lawrence and Foil, 2002). However,
on the other hand, prolonged development might allow these
individuals to attain a larger size when they emerge. The exact
physiological mechanism of prolonged development of male preimagos from parents fed on male hosts is not clear and requires
further investigation.
In insects, longer development is often coupled with a larger size
of the emerged imago (Agosta, 2008). Furthermore, it was shown
that male size in some insects correlates positively with mating
success (Emlen, 1996; Agosta, 2010) (but see Taylor et al., 1998).
The relationship between mating success and body size in male fleas
has never been studied. Nevertheless, it is known that larger flea
individuals might have better locomotory abilities than smaller
DISCUSSION
The relationship between host gender and body size of male flea
offspring was the only effect that supported our predictions.
However, this effect was not found in female flea offspring. In
contradiction to our predictions, fleas from parents parasitizing
male hosts developed slower than those from parents parasitizing
female hosts. This again was true for male offspring only, whereas
no effect of host gender on the duration of development of female
offspring was found. The emergence success of fleas as well as
their resistance to starvation did not depend on the gender of the
hosts parasitized by their parents. In our earlier study, we found
that fleas produced more eggs when they exploited male in
comparison with female hosts (Khokhlova et al., 2009a). In
summary, the benefit experienced by fleas from exploitation of
male hosts was manifested as the production of more and larger
offspring, although the latter was related to male offspring only.
Below, we will discuss the possible causes and consequences of
this benefit.
Two not mutually exclusive mechanisms are usually invoked to
explain gender-biased parasitism. These are gender-related
differences in mobility and defence efforts. The latter include
behavioural and immune defences. Males are thought to be less
immunocompetent than females owing to higher levels of androgens
that suppress male immune function (Folstad and Karter, 1992;
Hughes and Randolph, 2001). However, the recent meta-analysis
by Roberts and colleagues (Roberts et al., 2004) casts doubt on this
hypothesis, especially regarding mammals. Nevertheless, our results
suggest that the main cause of the effect of host gender in the present
study was most likely gender difference in immunocompetence.
THEJOURNALOFEXPERIMENTALBIOLOGY
Effect of host gender on flea offspring
individuals (Rothschild et al., 1975). Given that copulation in fleas
is sometimes associated with courtship behaviour (Iqbal and
Humphries, 1974; Hsu and Wu, 2001), the larger size of a male
might be advantageous for locating a female and for successful
mating. Females might reject relatively small males when larger
ones are in the vicinity, as is the case in some insects (Kumano et
al., 2010). This scenario is feasible because fleas are aggregated
among their hosts, both on their bodies and in their burrows (Krasnov
et al., 2005c). Consequently, an increase in mating success with an
increase in body size in fleas could be expected. Thus, from an
evolutionary perspective, exploitation of a male host might benefit
a flea not only through an increase of its own personal fitness
(Khokhlova et al., 2009a) but also through the probable increased
fitness of its male offspring. In addition, adult longevity might
increase with larger body size (Taylor et al., 1998), allowing a male
flea to perform a greater number of matings during its lifetime (Hsu
and Wu, 2000).
From an ecological perspective, host gender-related differences
in egg production (Khokhlova et al., 2009a) and quality of male
offspring in X. ramesis might cause not only higher flea loads on
male than on female hosts (Krasnov et al., 2005a) but also a higher
proportion of male fleas on male hosts. For example, Bursten and
colleagues (Bursten et al., 1997) found that juvenile males of the
ground squirrel (Spermophilus beecheyi) were infested with more
fleas (Oropsylla montana) than juvenile females and that this
disproportionate infestation was due to an excess of male fleas.
However, this appeared to be not the case for X. ramesis and M.
crassus. Indeed, the sex ratio of fleas collected from individual
rodents did not deviate from unity (Krasnov et al., 2008b).
The effect of host gender on offspring variables was manifested
in male but not female offspring. This suggests that male fleas were
more sensitive to the gender of the hosts of their parents than were
female fleas. In our earlier studies of responses of male and female
fleas to a number of factors, we found that gender-bias in the
responses varied among factors. For example, female fleas were
more sensitive than male fleas to environmental fluctuations during
pre-imaginal development (Krasnov et al., 2001b) and to external
stimuli (Burdelov et al., 2007). The response to host gender in terms
of blood digestion was more pronounced in females than in males
(Khokhlova et al., 2009b). By contrast, males responded more
strongly than females to starvation (Krasnov et al., 2002a). These
differences in responses might be associated with gender-related
differences in physiology, such as the activity of salivary enzymes
(Ribeiro et al., 1990), metabolic rate (Fielden et al., 2004) and water
balance (Fielden et al., 2002). Physiological differences between
male and female fleas, in turn, are probably associated with
differences in their biological roles as well as with differences in
the urgency of a blood meal. The latter is more crucial for females
than for males owing to the necessity for feeding before mating (for
a review, see Krasnov, 2008).
In conclusion, the results of this study, as well as our earlier
reports (Khokhlova et al., 2009a; Khokhlova et al., 2009b), indicate
that parasitism on male hosts might be beneficial for fleas not only
in terms of their performance but also in terms of body size and,
thus, the competitive ability of their male offspring. Nevertheless,
the generality of these patterns should be further validated by studies
on other parasite–host associations.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant no. 27/08 to for
B.R.K. and I.S.K.). The experimental procedures comply with the laws of the State
of Israel. This is publication no. 685 of the Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology.
3303
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