Monarch butterflies help explain why parasites harm hosts

May 14, 2008 Monarch butterflies help explain why parasites harm hosts

Monarch detail. Credit: University of Georgia

It’s a paradox that has confounded evolutionary biologists since Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859: Since parasites depend on their hosts for survival, why do they harm them?

A new University of Georgia and Emory University study of monarch butterflies and the microscopic parasites that hitch a ride on them finds that the parasites strike a middle ground between the benefits gained by reproducing rapidly and the costs to their hosts. The study, published in the early online edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provides the first empirical evidence in a natural system of what’s called the “trade-off hypothesis.”

“Parasites have to harm their host to replicate and be transmitted,” said lead author Jacobus de Roode, a former post-doctoral researcher at UGA and now an assistant professor at Emory University. “But what this study found is that if they harm their host too much, they’ll suffer too. On the other hand, this study also shows that it does not benefit the parasite to be maximally benign, because those parasites don’t replicate enough to be effectively transmitted.”

In a painstaking, three-year study conducted in the laboratory of Sonia Altizer, assistant professor in the UGA Odum School of Ecology, researchers infected monarch caterpillars with varying levels of spores from a protozoan parasite commonly found in wild populations. After the adult butterflies emerged, females were mated and placed in outdoor mesh cages. The butterflies spread the parasites when they deposit spores onto eggs or leaves of the milkweed plants that caterpillars feed on.

These spores are then consumed by caterpillars as they feed. Each butterfly had one stalk of milkweed in its cage, and every day for up to 30 days the researchers gave the butterflies a new stalk while taking the previous stalk back to the lab for analysis. The spores on the eggs and on the milkweed were counted, which is no easy task considering that each spore is 1/100th the size of the powdery scales on butterfly wings. A single egg can have more than 1,000 spores on it.

The researchers crunched the numbers and found clear support of a hypothesis that is popular among scientists but, until now, had not been well studied in a naturally occurring parasite and its host. They found that female monarchs that were too heavily infected often died before they mated or, if they survived, did not mate. Females who had an intermediate parasite load were long lived and laid a large number of eggs, while females with light parasite loads also were long lived and had many offspring, but relatively few offspring were infected.

“The findings of this study are significant because they provide an explanation for why so many parasites cause disease and death to their hosts,” de Roode said.

The results demonstrated that the trade-off hypothesis holds for monarchs in a controlled setting, but the researchers also wanted to know how natural selection influences virulence in the wild. They isolated parasite strains from monarch butterflies in eastern and western North America that have different migratory behaviors. Eastern monarchs famously migrate from breeding grounds as far north as Canada to their wintering sites in central Mexico and then back again, traveling up to 5,000 km round-trip. Western monarchs migrate roughly a third of this distance to winter along the California coast.

“We thought that if the parasites are going to be more benign in any population, it’s going to be in the eastern monarchs,” Altizer said, “because those butterflies fly the farthest distances, and parasites that kill their hosts during this long journey won’t produce any offspring.”

The team exposed western and eastern monarchs to parasite strains from their own and the opposite population. Monarchs from both populations were equally susceptible to infection, but parasites from the western population caused the butterflies to die sooner, confirming the team’s predictions that eastern parasites are more benign.

Aside from shedding light on the vexing evolutionary question of why parasites harm their hosts, the study has implications for the health of humans and butterflies.

In some cases, scientists have predicted how public health interventions can influence the evolution of disease virulence based on the trade-off hypothesis. Predictions require careful knowledge of host and parasite biology, but one idea is that interventions that block parasite transmission opportunities could cause natural selection to favor strains with lower virulence. The team’s findings suggest that when transmission opportunities are more limited, such as in the eastern monarch populations, natural selection will favor parasites that can persist longer on infected hosts and cause less damage.

The study also calls into question the wisdom of captive breeding of monarchs for intentional release at events such as weddings. Captive rearing conditions can promote parasite transmission and favor more virulent parasite strains that have the potential to harm wild populations that come into contact with them.

Altizer points out that migratory monarchs are already facing challenges from climate change – which reduces their migratory range – and habitat destruction in their winter breeding grounds.

“There’s a very real probability that the eastern migratory population will be lost sometime in the next 50 to 100 years,” Altizer said. “Smaller, non migratory populations will likely persist, but we’re expecting that many more butterflies will be infected and that the parasites could become more virulent.”

Source: University of Georgia


print this article email this article download pdf blog this article bookmark this article     Stumble it Digg this share on Facebook retweet share on Reddit add to delicious
Rate this story - 4.8 /5 (6 votes)


May 14, 2008 all stories

Comments: 0

4.8 /5 (6 votes)
  • Stumble this up

  • Digg this

  • share this

  • hide
  • Related Stories

  • When hosts go extinct, what happens to their parasites?
    created Jun 01, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Researchers find natural section favors parasite fitness over host health
    created May 12, 2008 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Researchers witness natural selection at work in dramatic comeback of male butterflies
    created Jul 12, 2007 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • Measuring and modeling blood flow in malaria
    created Nov 23, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0
  • New insight in the fight against the Leishmania parasite
    created Oct 23, 2009 | popularity not rated yet | comments 0


Other News

Variable Temperatures Leave Insects wtih a Frosty Reception

Biology / Plants & Animals

created 10 hours ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

(PhysOrg.com) -- For the first time, scientists at The University of Western Ontario have shown that insects exposed to repeated periods of cold will trade reproduction for immediate survival.


When camouflage is a plant's best protection

Rare woodland plant uses 'cryptic coloration' to hide from predators

Biology / Plants & Animals

created 12 hours ago | popularity 4.3 / 5 (3) | comments 0

It is well known that some animal species use camouflage to hide from predators. Individuals that are able to blend in to their surroundings and avoid being eaten are able to survive longer, reproduce, and ...


Cells defend themselves from viruses, bacteria with armor of protein errors

Biology / Cell & Microbiology

created 14 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (7) | comments 0

When cells are confronted with an invading virus or bacteria or exposed to an irritating chemical, they protect themselves by going off their DNA recipe and inserting the wrong amino acid into new proteins to defend them ...


Researchers discover biological basis of 'bacterial immune system'

Biology / Cell & Microbiology

created 14 hours ago | popularity 4.7 / 5 (3) | comments 0

Bacteria don't have easy lives. In addition to mammalian immune systems that besiege the bugs, they have natural enemies called bacteriophages, viruses that kill half the bacteria on Earth every two days.


'Safety valve' protects photosynthesis from too much light

Biology / Cell & Microbiology

created 14 hours ago | popularity 4.7 / 5 (3) | comments 0

Photosynthetic organisms need to cope with a wide range of light intensities, which can change over timescales of seconds to minutes. Too much light can damage the photosynthetic machinery and cause cell death. Scientists ...