High cost of lactation compromises immune processes in spotted hyenas

Spotted hyenas. Foto: IZW
Spotted hyenas; Photo: IZW

Scientists showed that in spotted hyenas lactation increases the chance of parasite infection. The results have been published in the scientific journal “Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology”.

Researchers revealed for the first time in a large carnivore that immune processes were compromised in lactating spotted hyena females, because they were more likely to be infected with hookworms and had higher hookworm burdens than non-lactating females. Mothers producing the larger volume of milk required by a twin litter had higher hookworm infections than those raising singleton litters.
Spotted hyenas are social carnivores which live in large communities (“clans”) with a strict dominance hierarchy. Females in a high position have priority access to food. Therefore hookworm infection increased as female social status declined because of the far greater foraging effort of low status mothers that regularly must undertake frequent long-distance foraging trips.

Marion East and her colleagues from the German Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW) and researchers of the University of Cardiff in the UK investigated spotted hyenas in the Serengeti National Park in northern Tanzania using a non-invasive measure of parasite infection (i.e. hookworm eggs per gram faeces). Hookworms are common extracellular gastrointestinal parasites of mammals. Adult worms inhabit the small intestine, where they feed on their host’s mucosa and blood. The extent of the pathology caused to the host increases with the number of adults hookworms present. The drain on host resources caused by parasite infection can lead to a decline in the host’s body condition, thereby predisposing it to further infections.

Lactation is nutritionally the most costly component of reproduction in mammals.Spotted hyena milk has high energy content composed of mostly fat and protein. Cubs are entirely dependent on milk for approximately the first six months of life and may not be weaned until 18-20 months of age. Life-history theory predicts that to sustain lactation, mothers with insufficient food intake may have to reduce their resource allocation to other life processes, such as investment in immune processes. In spotted hyenas, concurrent infection with an opportunistic intracellular gut parasite (Cystoisosopora) increased as hookworm infection increased, providing further evidence of compromised immune processes.

Publication:

East ML, Otte E, Helms J, Thierer D, Cable J, Hofer H (2015): Does lactation lead to resource allocation trade-offs in the spotted hyaena? BEAHV ECOL SOCIOBIOL; DOI 10.1007/s00265-015-1897-x.

Contact:
Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW)
Alfred-Kowalke-Str. 17
10315 Berlin
 
Dr Marion L East
Tel.: +40 30 51 68 512
 
Steven Seet
(Unit Press & Communication)
Tel.: +49 30 51 68 125
 

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Background information:

The Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW) investigates the vitality and adaptability of wildlife populations in mammalian and avian species of outstanding ecological interest that face anthropogenic challenges. It studies the adaptive value of traits in the life cycle of wildlife, wildlife diseases and clarifies the biological basis and development of methods for the protection of threatened species. Such knowledge is a precondition for a scientifically based approach to conservation and for the development of concepts for the ecologically sustainable use of natural resources. The IZW belongs to the Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V. (www.fv-berlin.de)

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