Population trends in Kittiwake Rissa tridactyla colonies in relation to tick infestation
- 1 April 1996
- Vol. 138 (2) , 326-334
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1996.tb04345.x
Abstract
Parasite and disease transmission has long been considered one of the main costs of group living, but there is still little empirical evidence. Most seabird species breed in dense colonies and occupy the same breeding sites for many years and thus could be exposed to deleterious levels of haematophagous ectoparasite infestations. The aims of this study were to provide information on the epidemiology of the tickIxodes uriaeand to investigate the relationship between KittiwakeRissa tridactylacolony population trends and local levels of tick infestation in chicks. It is based on a cross‐sectional survey of a large sample of British Kittiwake colonies (22 colonies more than 30 years old and situated on natural cliffs).Ixodes uriaewas by far the most common ectoparasite detected and was found in all colonies examined. Ticks were aggregated between nests, but not between siblings. Very young and old chicks were far less parasitized than chicks of intermediate age and were excluded from the analysis. Among colonies for which we had good data on population trends in Kittiwakes, those decreasing in number had a higher prevalence and density of ticks than those which were increasing. We suggest that this correlation reveals a cause‐and‐effect relationship. By influencing the local reproductive success, ectoparasites can affect the recruitment of new breeders and the breeders' site fidelity in the following year, thus influencing the local trend of numbers. This causal link highlights the potential effect of parasites on their host population and thus needs to be investigated further.Keywords
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