Parasite induced changes in contact behaviour is affected by parasitic status of group members

AM Morris, Giles Innocent, Emma J.A. Cunningham, Darren Croft, S Athanasiadou, MR Hutchings, LA Smith*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Understanding how parasitism may affect social behavior and social networks is key to understanding the impact of infection on a population. Infection can disrupt social networks by altering the behavior of both infected individuals (e.g. by reducing activity) and the behavior of uninfected individuals (e.g. avoiding sick individuals), both of which can have an impact on social group dynamics and parasite transmission. Here we test experimentally how parasitism affects social contact behavior and social network structure using a common parasite infection of sheep. Three treatment groups, each with 4 replicate social groups were established (i) Parasitised; all lambs were infected with a parasitic nematode, (ii) Non-parasitised; all lambs remained uninfected (iii) Mixed; part of each group were infected, and part of the group remained uninfected. Contact behaviours of each individual were recorded using proximity loggers during four phases of infection (pre-parasite, pre-patent, patent-parasite, post-parasite). We found infected individuals in the parasitised and mixed groups reduced contact frequency following infection. Despite the reduction in contacts between infected animals in the mixed group, non-infected individual’s maintained pre-parasite levels of social interactions with their infected conspecifics. These results demonstrate how infection can impact the social behavior of all animals within a group, and how the expression of behavioral change may depend on the parasitic status of all group members and the response of uninfected conspecifics.
Original languageEnglish
Article number65
Number of pages17
JournalBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Volume79
Early online date6 Jun 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPrint publication - Jun 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.

Keywords

  • Parasitism
  • Sickness behaviour
  • Social behaviour
  • Sociality
  • Social network analysis
  • Social structure

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