How does an animal age in natural conditions? Given the multifaceted nature of senescence, identifying the effects of age on physiology and behavior remains challenging. We investigated the effects of age on a broad array of phenotypic traits in a wild, longlived animal, the wandering albatross. We studied foraging behavior using satellite tracking and activity loggers in males and females (age 6-48+ years), and monitored reproductive performance and nine markers of baseline physiology known to reflect senescence in vertebrates (humoral immunity, oxidative stress, antioxidant defenses, and hormone levels). Age strongly affected foraging behavior and reproductive performance, but not baseline physiology. Consistent with results of mammal and human studies, age affected males and females differently. Overall, our findings demonstrate that age, sex, and foraging ability interact in shaping aging patterns in natural conditions. Specifically, we found an unexpected pattern of spatial segregation by age; old males foraged in remote Antarctica waters, whereas young and middle-aged males never foraged south of the Polar Front. Old males traveled a greater distance but were less active at the sea surface, and returned from sea with elevated levels of stress hormone (corticosterone), mirroring a low foraging efficiency. In contrast to findings in captive animals and shortlived birds, and consistent with disposable soma theory, we found no detectable age-related deterioration of baseline physiology in albatrosses. We propose that foraging efficiency (i.e., the ability of individuals to extract energy from their environment) might play a central role in shaping aging patterns in natural conditions. senescence | foraging | immunity | oxidative stress | sex S enescence, a decline in fitness with advancing age, has been documented across a wide range of wild animals (1-3). There is an ongoing debate in the literature regarding the proximate mechanisms underpinning senescence. Age-associated immune dysfunction (referred to as immunosenescence) and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress are strong candidates as the major driving forces behind senescence in humans and laboratory animal models (4-6), but their relevance in natural populations remains unclear. Because of their generally longer lifespan compared with mammals, birds have emerged as predominant models for studying aging (7,8). The first studies on senescence were restricted almost entirely to investigations of age-dependent mortality or breeding performance (1). More recent pioneering studies that focused on proximal physiological patterns of aging in free-living birds yielded contrasting results; senescence was linked with decreased humoral immune response (9), increased oxidative stress (10), altered plasma levels of some hormones (refs. 2, 11; but see ref. 12), and decreased metabolic rate (ref. 13, but see ref. 14).Foraging behavior, the set of processes by which organisms acquire energy and nutrients (15), merits specific attention, because it may play a k...
The epidemiology of vector-borne pathogens is largely determined by the host-choice behaviour of their vectors. Here, we investigate whether a Plasmodium infection renders the host more attractive to host-seeking mosquitoes. For this purpose, we work on a novel experimental system: the avian malaria parasite Plasmodium relictum, and its natural vector, the mosquito Culex pipiens. We provide uninfected mosquitoes with a choice between an uninfected bird and a bird undergoing either an acute or a chronic Plasmodium infection. Mosquito choice is assessed by microsatellite typing of the ingested blood. We show that chronically infected birds attract significantly more vectors than either uninfected or acutely infected birds. Our results suggest that malaria parasites manipulate the behaviour of uninfected vectors to increase their transmission. We discuss the underlying mechanisms driving this behavioural manipulation, as well as the broader implications of these effects for the epidemiology of malaria.
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