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Infection–nutrition feedbacks: fat supports pathogen clearance but pathogens reduce fat in a wild mammal


Abstract Though far less obvious than direct effects (clinical disease or mortality), the indirect influences of pathogens are difficult to estimate but may hold fitness consequences. Here, we disentangle the directional relationships between infection and energetic reserves, evaluating the hypotheses that energetic reserves influence infection status of the host and that infection elicits costs to energetic reserves. Using repeated measures of fat reserves and infection status in individual bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, we documented that fat influenced ability to clear pathogens (Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae) and infection with respiratory pathogens was costly to fat reserves. Costs of infection approached, and in some instances exceeded, costs of rearing offspring to independence in terms of reductions to fat reserves. Fat influenced probability of clearing pathogens, pregnancy and over-winter survival; from an energetic perspective, an animal could survive for up to 23 days on the amount of fat that was lost to high levels of infection. Cost of pathogens may amplify trade-offs between reproduction and survival. In the absence of an active outbreak, the influence of resident pathogens often is overlooked. Nevertheless, the energetic burden of pathogens likely has consequences for fitness and population dynamics, especially when food resources are insufficient.
Authors Rachel A. Smiley University of WyomingORCID , Brittany L. Wagler ORCID , William H. Edwards ORCID , Jessica Jennings‐Gaines ORCID , Katie L. Luukkonen , Kara Robbins , M. P. Johnson , Alyson B. Courtemanch ORCID , Tony W. Mong ORCID , Daryl Lutz , Doug McWhirter , Jennifer L. Malmberg University of WyomingORCID , Blake Lowrey ORCID , Kevin L. Monteith University of WyomingORCID
Journal Info Royal Society | Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences , vol: 291 , iss: 2027
Publication Date 7/17/2024
ISSN 0962-8452
TypeKeyword Image article
Open Access hybrid Hybrid Access
DOI https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2024.0636
KeywordsKeyword Image Mammal (Score: 0.6758795)