“…By definition, a parasite affects its host negatively (Zelmer, 1998), and parasite infection can, as such, be considered a ‘stressor’, which we would expect to elicit a stress response. In spite of the ubiquitous presence of parasites in wildlife (Poulin, 2014) and their demonstrated influence on, and importance for, individual and population health (Irvine, 2006; Gómez and Nichols, 2013), very few studies have examined the relationship between stress and parasitism (Goldstein et al ., 2005; Chapman et al ., 2006; Monello et al ., 2010; Cizauskas et al ., 2015), and none has looked at these relationships in Rangifer .…”