“…For example, during early life, juveniles are generally more susceptible to infection by pathogens than adults, partly because of their limited capacity to mount an effective immune responses due to qualitative differences in the T‐cell populations of juveniles and adults (Ramsburg et al, ), and naïve, mostly young animals that lack exposure to pathogen antigens have not developed the acquired immune responses that develop as a result of exposure (Cattadori et al, ; Koudela & Kučerová, ). The decrease in Ancylostoma and Cystoisospora infection loads in juvenile hyenas with age may be the combined outcome of increased immunocompetence due to active immune responses induced by parasite exposure, which is likely to increase with age (East et al, ; Ferreira, Torelli, et al, ) and the general maturation of the mammalian immune system in juvenile hyenas with increasing age. Currently, little is known about factors that affect immunocompetence in juvenile hyenas, so in addition to age, factors such as genotype and gene expression (Gulland, Albon, Pemberton, Moorcroft, & Clutton‐Brock, ; Jackson et al, ), allostatic load, physiological processes, behavior, and diet may be relevant (Ardia et al, ; VanderWaal & Ezenwa, ).…”