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Featured researches published by Elisa Lobato.


Biology Letters | 2010

The blood parasite Haemoproteus reduces survival in a wild bird: a medication experiment

JosueMartõ ´ nez-de la Puente; Santiago Merino; Juan Moreno; Judith Morales; Elisa Lobato; Eduardo Jorge Belda

While avian chronic haemoparasite infections induce reproductive costs, infection has not previously been shown to affect survival. Here, we experimentally reduced, through medication, the intensity of infection by Haemoproteus parasites in wild-breeding female blue tits Cyanistes caeruleus. However, this treatment did not reduce the intensity of infection in males or the intensity of infection by Leucocytozoon. Medicated females, but not males, showed increased local survival until the next breeding season compared with control birds. To our knowledge, this is the first empirical evidence showing long-term direct survival costs of chronic Haemoproteus infections in wild birds.


The Condor | 2007

SEXUAL DIMORPHISM AND PARENTAL ROLES IN THE THORN-TAILED RAYADITO (FURNARIIDAE)

Juan Moreno; Santiago Merino; Elisa Lobato; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Gironés; Rodrigo A. Vásquez

Abstract Sexual dimorphism, mating system, and parental care are known for only a few species of the large passerine family Furnariidae. We conducted a study of sexual dimorphism in morphology, coloration, and parental roles during incubation and chick-rearing in the Thorn-tailed Rayadito (Aphrastura spinicauda), a characteristic resident ovenbird of the southern temperate rainforests of Chile and Argentina. Through molecular sexing, morphological measurements, and spectrophotometric analysis of body plumage and rectrices of reproductive adults captured on Chiloé Island (southern Chile), we determined that males were between 2% and 10% larger than females in mass, tarsus length, and wing length, while no difference was found for the length of the bill or the two longest central rectrices and their characteristic spines, or in plumage coloration. Heavy males were paired with heavy females and light males with light females. Males and females participated equally in all reproductive activities during the incubation and nestling phases, except removal of nestling feces, in which females were twice as active as males. In a study of habitat use on Navarino Island (extreme southern Chile) we found that the extended graduated tail, with rectrices that end in spines, which gives the species its name, was not used as a support while foraging and could be related to another function such as sexual or social signaling. The absence of sexual dimorphism in plumage and parental roles in rayaditos may be related to the use of the long, graduated tail as a signal of quality by both sexes, although this hypothesis requires confirmation through future mate choice studies.


Ecoscience | 2007

Early moult improves local survival and reduces reproductive output in female pied flycatchers

Judith Morales; Juan Moreno; Santiago Merino; Juan José Sanz; Gustavo Tomás; Elena Arriero; Elisa Lobato; Josué Martínez de la Puente

ABSTRACT Overlapping moult and reproduction might be crucial for long-distance migratory birds, which are time-constrained to complete these energy-demanding functions before the onset of migration. However, proximate factors modulating the potential trade-off between moult and breeding, such as haemoparasite infection and stress, have not been studied in wild avian populations. We investigated the occurrence of moult-breeding overlap in females of a Spanish population of pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) and its association with female age, haemoparasite prevalences, physiological stress, and condition at initial (incubation phase or beginning of the nestling period) and final breeding stages (days 11–12 of the nestling period). Late-breeding females were more likely to show a moult–breeding overlap than early-breeding females. Female age was not associated with moult status when taking into account laying date and study year. A higher proportion of females infected by Haemoproteus at initial breeding stages showed a moult–breeding overlap. Haemoproteus prevalences at final breeding stages did not differ according to moult status. Females with a moult–breeding overlap also showed better condition and lower stress levels (HSP60 levels) at the end of the season. A higher proportion of moulting females returned to the breeding grounds in the following season compared with non-moulting ones. Conversely, moulting females showed reduced hatching success and numbers of hatchlings and fledglings. Overlapping moult and breeding might be the expression of a shift in resource allocation between present and future reproduction, towards increased self-maintenance and reduced reproductive investment. Nomenclature: Cramp, Perrins & Brooks, 1993.


Naturwissenschaften | 2011

Nest ectoparasites increase physiological stress in breeding birds: an experiment

Josué Martínez de la Puente; Santiago Merino; Gustavo Tomás; Juan Moreno; Judith Morales; Elisa Lobato; Javier Martínez

Parasites are undoubtedly a biotic factor that produces stress. Heat shock proteins (HSPs) are important molecules buffering cellular damage under adverse conditions. During the breeding season, blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus (L.) adults are affected by blood parasites, nest-dwelling parasites and biting flies, potentially affecting their HSP-mediated responses. Here, we treated females with primaquine to reduce blood parasites and fumigated nests with permethrin to reduce nest-dwelling parasites to test whether these treatments affect HSP60 level during the breeding season. Medicated females, but not controls, had a significant reduction of the intensity of infection by Haemoproteus spp. blood parasites. However, final intensity of infection did not differ significantly between groups, and we did not find an effect of medication on change in HSP60 level. Fumigation reduced the abundance of nest-dwelling parasites (mites, fleas and blowfly larvae) and engorged biting midges in nests. Females breeding in non-fumigated nests increased HSP60 levels during the season more than those breeding in fumigated nests. Furthermore, the change in HSP60 level was positively correlated with the abundance of biting midges. These results show how infections by nest ectoparasites during the breeding period can increase the level of HSPs and suggest that biting midges impose physiological costs on breeding female blue tits. Although plausible, the alternative that biting midges prefer to feed on more stressed birds is poorly supported by previous studies.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2012

Exposure of black-legged kittiwakes to Lyme disease spirochetes: dynamics of the immune status of adult hosts and effects on their survival.

Thierry Chambert; Vincent Staszewski; Elisa Lobato; Rémi Choquet; Cécile Carrié; Karen D. McCoy; Torkild Tveraa; Thierry Boulinier

1. Despite a growing interest in wildlife disease ecology, there is a surprising lack of knowledge about the exposure dynamics of individual animals to naturally circulating infectious agents and the impact of such agents on host life-history traits. 2. The exploration of these questions requires detailed longitudinal data on individual animals that can be captured multiple times during their life but also requires being able to account for several sources of uncertainty, notably the partial observation or recapture of individuals at each sampling occasion. 3. We use a multi-year dataset to (i) assess the potential effect of exposure to the tick-borne agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl), on adult apparent survival for one of its natural long-lived hosts, the Black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), and (ii) investigate the temporal dynamics of individual immunological status in kittiwakes to infer the rate of new exposure and the persistence of the immune response. Using a multi-event modelling approach, potential uncertainties arising from partial observations were explicitly taken into account. 4. The potential impact of Bbsl on kittiwake survival was also evaluated via an experimental approach: the apparent survival of a group of breeding birds treated with an antibiotic was compared with that of a control group. 5. No impact of exposure to Bbsl was detected on adult survival in kittiwakes, in either observational or experimental data. 6. An annual seroconversion rate (from negative to positive) of 1·5% was estimated, but once an individual became seropositive, it remained so with a probability of 1, suggesting that detectable levels of anti-Bbsl antibodies persist for multiple years. 7. These results, in combination with knowledge on patterns of exposure to the tick vector of Bbsl, provide important information for understanding the spatio-temporal nature of the interaction between this host and several of its parasites. Furthermore, our analyses highlight the utility of capture-mark-recapture approaches handling state uncertainty for disease ecology studies.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2014

An experimental test of host specialization in a ubiquitous polar ectoparasite: a role for adaptation?

Muriel Dietrich; Elisa Lobato; Thierry Boulinier; Karen D. McCoy

The evolution of host specificity is considered to be an essential mechanism driving parasite diversity. It may be governed by adaptive constraints that lead to host-dependent fitness trade-offs. Alternatively, specificity may arise via transmission constraints that isolate parasite populations, without necessarily involving adaptation per se. Here, we ask whether the repeated observation of host-associated genetic races across the worldwide distribution of the seabird ectoparasite Ixodes uriae is associated with host adaptation. We conducted a field-based experiment to test for adaptive specialisation in host races of I.xa0uriae. We transferred unengorged ticks of two life stages (nymphs and adults) originating from three host species (black-legged kittiwake, common guillemot and Atlantic puffin) onto young kittiwake nestlings and followed attraction and attachment rates, engorgement times and feeding success of the transplanted ticks. All ticks were also typed genetically to match exploitation patterns with genetic differences among races. Ticks from atypical hosts were significantly less attracted to nestlings than ticks from the typical host, and showed lower feeding success and higher mortality. The degree of host specificity matched patterns of neutral genetic variation among races, with puffin ticks being more specific than guillemot ticks. Differences in specificity were also apparent among tick life stages, suggesting that nymphal ticks may be less discriminating of host type than adult ticks. Our results indicate that the genetic divergence previously observed among sympatric I.xa0uriae host races is at least partially linked to adaptive specialisation to the host species and not simply to host-mediated transmission. They also suggest that the adaptation process may evolve differently in different life stages based on trade-offs with physiological constraints. The identification of the selective forces acting in host specialization will now be necessary to better characterize these patterns and to understand how transmission interacts with the adaptation process to generate parasite biodiversity.


Journal of Parasitology | 2006

MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF THE 18S rDNA GENE OF AN AVIAN HEPATOZOON REVEALS THAT IT IS CLOSELY RELATED TO LANKESTERELLA

Santiago Merino; Javier Martínez; Josué Martínez de la Puente; A. Criado-Fornelio; Gustavo Tomás; Judith Morales; Elisa Lobato; Sonia García-Fraile

As a part of intensive study of blood parasite infections in a population of the passerine bird blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus, Paridae), we detected a parasite species that, based on its morphological similarity, was tentatively identified as Hepatozoon parus, the only species of this parasite genus described from birds of this family. However, morphological measurements show that H. parus is slightly larger than the parasite detected in our population. A molecular characterization of the parasite species was conducted by amplification of the 18S rDNA gene, using primers that were reported previously to amplify in Hepatozoon sp. of water pythons. Additional primers were developed based on the new sequence obtained. The 1,484-bp fragment amplified reveals that the parasite from our bird population is more closely related to Lankesterella minima than to Hepatozoon species from other vertebrates according to analysis using the BLAST comparison method (93% identity). In addition, phylogenetic analyses using parsimony and Kimura procedures unequivocally related the parasite species detected by PCR with L. minima. The bootstrap values obtained were 97% and 100%, respectively. These results imply that this parasite is a species of a lankesterellid instead of Hepatozoon.


Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases | 2011

Seabirds and the Circulation of Lyme Borreliosis Bacteria in the North Pacific

Elisa Lobato; Jessica Pearce-Duvet; Vincent Staszewski; Elena Gómez-Díaz; Jacob González-Solís; Alexander S. Kitaysky; Karen D. McCoy; Thierry Boulinier

Seabirds act as natural reservoirs to Lyme borreliosis spirochetes and may play a significant role in the global circulation of these pathogens. While Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl) has been shown to occur in ticks collected from certain locations in the North Pacific, little is known about interspecific differences in exposure within the seabird communities of this region. We examined the prevalence of anti-Bbsl antibodies in 805 individuals of nine seabird species breeding across the North Pacific. Seroprevalence varied strongly among species and locations. Murres (Uria spp.) showed the highest antibody prevalence and may play a major role in facilitating Bbsl circulation at a worldwide scale. Other species showed little or no signs of exposure, despite being present in multispecific colonies with seropositive birds. Complex dynamics may be operating in this wide scale, natural host-parasite system, possibly mediated by the host immune system and host specialization of the tick vector.


Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine | 2011

Prevalence of Salmonella and Yersinia in Free-Living Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) in Central Spain

Rafael Ruiz-de-Castañeda; Ana I. Vela; Elisa Lobato; V. Briones; Juan Moreno

Abstract:u2003 Salmonella and Yersinia are important enteropathogens in poultry and can affect birds of all ages, including embryos. These food-borne zoonotic enteropathogens are of great economic and medical concern worldwide and are intensely studied in poultry. Information regarding the prevalence of these bacteria in wild birds is scarce and biased toward avian species ecologically linked to humans, which have often been incriminated as both reservoirs and disseminators of these enteropathogens. The prevalence of Salmonella and Yersinia recovered from both the feces and eggs in a population of female pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) breeding in nest-boxes in central Spain was evaluated. Salmonella arizonae was recovered from the feces of one female but was not recovered from eggs. Yersinia was not detected in either the feces or eggs. These results may suggest that Salmonella and Yersinia may be uncommon in this population studied and may indicate that these birds are unlikely reservoirs of Salmonella and Yersinia.


Journal of Biogeography | 2017

Insularity effects on the assemblage of the blood parasite community of the birds from the Gulf of Guinea

Claire Loiseau; Martim Melo; Elisa Lobato; Jon S. Beadell; Robert C. Fleischer; Sandra Reis; Claire Doutrelant; Rita Covas

AimnLower species diversity, increased population densities and ecological niche enlargement are common characteristics of island faunas. However it remains to be determined if they extend to the parasite community. We tested if Haemosporidia parasite pressure varies between islands and the mainland with two different levels of analysis: i) at the host community level, and ii) with paired-species comparisons between islands and the mainland.nnnLocationnGulf of Guinea, West Africa.nnnMethodsnWe used molecular-based methods to identify avian Haemosporidian parasites (Plasmodium, Haemoproteus and Leucocytozoon) to describe their diversity, prevalence, host specificity and their phylogenetic relationships in five islands of the Gulf of Guinea and in nearby mainland areas.nnnResultsnWe found reduced Haemosporidia diversity on islands for Haemoproteus and Leucocytozoon, but not for Plasmodium. In addition, lower parasite prevalence on islands was found using a paired-species approach. Although the mean host specificity of the parasite community on islands did not differ from the mainland, we found a very distinct parasite species assemblage on the islands, which was composed of both the most generalist and the most specialist lineages.nnnMain conclusionsnThis study supports the hypothesis that parasite pressure is reduced on islands. Colonization is made by generalists with high host switching capacities, with some subsequently evolving into highly specialised parasites. This suggests that taxon cycle dynamics may explain the assemblage of insular parasite communities.

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Juan Moreno

Spanish National Research Council

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Santiago Merino

Spanish National Research Council

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Judith Morales

Spanish National Research Council

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Gustavo Tomás

Spanish National Research Council

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Thierry Boulinier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claire Doutrelant

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Karen D. McCoy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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