What is it about?
Julia Mlynarek, a PhD student at Carleton University, collected a large number of damselflies from a number of sites around eastern Ontario. The species were grouped into pairs so that we could compare between species from the same genus. She dissected these to find the number of protozoa (like the one shown above) in guts of each animal. We found that species with smaller geographical distributions tended to have more protozoan parasites than closely related species with larger distributions.
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Photo by Krzysztof Niewolny on Unsplash
Why is it important?
Explaining how parasites affect their hosts is a big question spanning ecology and evolutionary biology. These results suggest that there might be a combined effect of (i) shared parasites due to evolutionary history, and (ii) varying resistance due to different exposure across geographical ranges.
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This page is a summary of: Higher gregarine parasitism often in sibling species of host damselflies with smaller geographical distributions, Ecological Entomology, September 2012, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2012.01381.x.
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