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

Author(s): 
Josué Martínez-de la Puente1,*, Santiago Merino1, Gustavo Tomás1,2, Juan Moreno1, Judith Morales, Elisa Lobato, Sonia García-Fraile and Eduardo Jorge Belda
Reference: 
Biology Letters, Published online before print February 24, 2010
Contact email: 
jmp@mncn.csic.es

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 Haemoproteusparasites 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.