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  <title><![CDATA[Scientists Uncover an Unhealthy Herds Hypothesis]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>Biologists worldwide subscribe to the healthy herds
hypothesis, the idea that predators can keep packs of prey healthy by removing
the weak and the sick. This reduces the chance disease will wipe out the whole
herd, but could it be that predators can also make prey populations more
susceptible to other predators or even parasites? Biologists at the Georgia
Institute of Technology have discovered at least one animal whose defenses
against a predator make it a good target for one opportunistic parasite. The research
appears online in the journal <em>Functional
Ecology</em><strong>.</strong></p>

<p><strong>“</strong>We found that strategies that
prey use to defend themselves against predators can increase their
susceptibility to infection by parasites,” said Meghan Duffy, assistant
professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Biology.</p>

<p>Duffy,
along with colleagues at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and
Indiana University, took a look at a small aquatic crustacean, <em>Daphnia dentifera</em>, a water flea known to
be an important part of freshwater ecosystems. They exposed the crustacean to
chemicals emitted by one of its predators, a phantom midge larva known as <em>Chaoborus</em>, known to feed on it. When the
<em>Daphnia</em> detected those chemicals it
grew larger, making it harder for its predator to get its mouth around it.</p>

<p>“Unfortunately
for the&nbsp;<em>Daphnia</em>, this defense against predation
makes them more vulnerable to parasitism,” said Duffy.</p>

<p>That’s
because while growing larger keeps <em>Daphnia</em>
safe from <em>Chaoborus</em>, it actually
makes it more susceptible to a virulent yeast parasite, known as <em>Metschnikowia</em>. When <em>Daphnia</em> senses a threat from its predator and<em> </em>grows larger, it ends up consuming more of these parasitic yeasts than
it does when normal size. When the yeast infects the crustacean, it kills it,
causing the dead animal to release yeast spores as it decomposes. The larger
the host, the more spores it releases back into the water to prey on other <em>Daphnia</em>.</p>

<p>“Since
they need to grow larger to defend themselves against the predator but the
opposite to defend against the parasite, they're sort of stuck between a rock
and a hard place,” she added.</p>

<p>Duffy
reasons that this occurs because the predators are common year-round, while the
parasites are more episodic in nature, with their populations expanding in
epidemics only in the fall and not even yearly. This results in long periods of
predation in the absence of the parasite, which probably explains why they
respond so strongly to defend themselves against the predator even though it
decreases their defenses against the yeast, she added.</p>

<p>“While
some have argued for increasing predator densities to control disease, our
results suggest that it is important to consider the indirect effects of
predators, such as the one we found in which trying to avoid one enemy
increases the hosts vulnerability to another,” said Duffy.</p>

<p><em>This research was
funded by the National Science Foundation</em>.</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></body>
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  <field_dateline>
    <item>
      <value>2011-06-23T00:00:00-04:00</value>
      <timezone><![CDATA[America/New_York]]></timezone>
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  <field_summary_sentence>
    <item>
      <value><![CDATA[One animals defense against prey can make it more susceptible to a parasite.]]></value>
    </item>
  </field_summary_sentence>
  <field_summary>
    <item>
      <value><![CDATA[<p>Biologists worldwide subscribe to the healthy herds
hypothesis, but could it be that predators can also make prey populations more
susceptible to other predators or even parasites? Biologists at the Georgia
Institute of Technology have discovered at least one animal whose defenses
against a predator make it a good target for one opportunistic parasite. The
research appears online in the journal <em>Functional
Ecology</em><strong>.</strong></p>]]></value>
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            <title><![CDATA[Killer Larva Preys on Small Crustacean]]></title>
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                  <image_alt><![CDATA[Killer Larva Preys on Small Crustacean]]></image_alt>
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            <type>image</type>
            <title><![CDATA[Parasite Grows in Crustacean]]></title>
            <body><![CDATA[]]></body>
                          <field_image>
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                  <fid>193323</fid>
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                  <image_alt><![CDATA[Parasite Grows in Crustacean]]></image_alt>
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      <email><![CDATA[mattnagel@comm.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p><strong>Georgia Tech Media Relations</strong><br />Laura Diamond<br /><a href="mailto:laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu">laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu</a><br />404-894-6016<br />Jason Maderer<br /><a href="mailto:maderer@gatech.edu">maderer@gatech.edu</a><br />404-660-2926</p>]]></value>
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