Chronic infection. Hidden costs of infection: chronic malaria accelerates telomere degradation and senescence in wild birds.

Muhammad, Asghar; Hasselquist, Dennis; Hansson, Bengt; Zehtindjiev, P, et al. (2015). Chronic infection. Hidden costs of infection: chronic malaria accelerates telomere degradation and senescence in wild birds.. Science, 347, (6220), 436 - 438
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Muhammad, Asghar ; Hasselquist, Dennis ; Hansson, Bengt ; Zehtindjiev, P , et al.
Department:
MEMEG
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Project:
Malaria in birds
Long-term study of great reed warblers
Research Group:
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Abstract:
Recovery from infection is not always complete, and mild chronic infection may persist. Although the direct costs of such infections are apparently small, the potential for any long-term effects on Darwinian fitness is poorly understood. In a wild population of great reed warblers, we found that low-level chronic malaria infection reduced life span as well as the lifetime number and quality of offspring. These delayed fitness effects of malaria appear to be mediated by telomere degradation, a result supported by controlled infection experiments on birds in captivity. The results of this study imply that chronic infection may be causing a series of small adverse effects that accumulate and eventually impair phenotypic quality and Darwinian fitness.
ISSN:
1095-9203
LUP-ID:
162d031e-d893-48d9-87f0-82591af32fd3 | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/162d031e-d893-48d9-87f0-82591af32fd3 | Statistics

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