Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Increased Endoparasite Infection in Late-Arriving Individuals of a Trans-Saharan Passerine Migrant Bird

  • Guillermo López ,

    guiloza@gmail.com

    Affiliation Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Applied Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana, Seville, Andalucía, Spain

  • Joaquín Muñoz,

    Current address: Department of Zoology, The University of Oklahoma Biological Station. Kingston, Oklahoma, United States of America

    Affiliation Department of Wetland Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana. Seville, Andalucía, Spain

  • Ramón Soriguer,

    Affiliation Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Applied Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana, Seville, Andalucía, Spain

  • Jordi Figuerola

    Affiliation Department of Wetland Ecology, Estación Biológica de Doñana. Seville, Andalucía, Spain

Abstract

Earlier migration in males than in females is the commonest pattern in migrating passerines and is positively related to size dimorphism and dichromatism. The early arrival of males is a costly trait that may confer reproductive advantages in terms of better territories and/or mates. Given the physiological cost of migration, early migrants are those in best condition and accordingly the prevalence, load, and/or diversity of parasites is expected to increase in both sexes for late migrants. To test this hypothesis, we sampled 187 trans-Saharan migrant garden warblers Sylvia borin and 64 resident serins Serinus serinus (as a control for potential circannual patterns in parasite load) during spring migration in Spain. We assessed the prevalence of blood parasites (Haemoproteus, Plasmodium, and Leucocytozoon) and the prevalence and load of intestinal parasites (mainly coccidians and spirurids). The relationship between parasite (prevalence, load, and richness) and the timing of passage through a stopover area was tested using generalized linear models. Protandry occurs in the monomorphic garden warbler and males migrated on average 5.5 days before females. Intestinal parasite richness increased with the date of migration. The timing of migration was unrelated to the presence or load of the other parasite groups analyzed. Our results support the idea that the timing of migration is a condition-dependent trait and suggests that multiple intestinal parasite infestations could delay migration in birds. Even in monomorphic species parasites may play a role in sexual selection by delaying the arrival of the most infected individuals at breeding grounds, thereby further increasing the benefits of mating with early-arriving individuals.

Introduction

Many bird species fly long distances twice a year in order to procure an optimum availability of resources [1]. Migrations are costly for birds both in terms of energy and mortality and so good body condition is necessary if they are to be successful [2], [3], [4]. An inter-sexual asynchrony in the timing of spring migration is frequent and protandry (i.e. the earlier migration of males than of females) is the commonest such occurrence [5], [6], [7]. Protandry is an innate behavioral trait [8] and is thought to be the result of the different evolutionary pressures operating on males and females [9], [10]. Three main hypotheses have been proposed to explain protandry: (1) the ‘rank-advantage hypothesis’ (male-male competition for the best breeding sites) [11], (2) the ‘mate-opportunity hypothesis’ (male-male competition for maximum mate acquisition) [12], [13], and (3) the ‘susceptibility hypothesis’ (inter-sexual differences in tolerance to adverse conditions) [14]. Consistent with the latter two hypotheses, protandry seems to be positively correlated to both sexual size dimorphism and sexual dichromatism [15], [16]. In other words, males arrive earlier than females in species with more intense sexual selection. Hence, mate competition is supposed to maximize protandry in species with polygynous mating strategies [6], [17]. According to the mate-opportunity hypothesis, the early arrival on the breeding grounds seems to be related to increased reproductive success for both males [13], [18], [19] and females [12], [20], [21]. However, early arrival is costly in terms of survival both during the route and in the breeding grounds, mainly due to the risk of starvation in the event of bad weather and few available resources at the beginning of spring [22], [23], [24]. Consequently it is to be expected that only birds in prime condition opt for this migration tactic. On this basis, conditions on wintering grounds have been shown to affect the timing of arrival in the breeding areas [25], [26], [27].

Parasites may negatively affect host body condition [28], [29], [30]; but see [31], [32], mate attractiveness and plumage brightness [33], [34], [35], reproductive success [36], [37], and survival [28], [38], [39]. However, the impact of parasites on hosts may be strongly context- and species-dependent since not all parasites have the same effect [40] and parasite impacts on host condition may in fact depend on access to resources [41], [42]. Given that migration success is condition-dependent, early arriving individuals would be expected to have lower parasite loads than late arriving individuals. The few studies that have explored the relationship between parasites and the timing of migration in birds are based on a reduced number of parasite groups. For instance, male pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca infected with haematozoan Trypanosoma were found to arrive on average two days later than non-infected birds [43]. Likewise, barn swallows Hirundo rustica infected with Hirundoecus malleus (Mallophaga) and Haemoproteus prognei (Haematozoa) arrived later in their breeding grounds [14]. However, we are not aware of any published study that had monitored potential phenological-related changes in parasite abundance. The goal of our study was to examine the relationship between the composition and abundance of the community of endoparasites (avian blood and intestinal parasites) and the timing of bird migration. We studied garden warblers (Sylvia borin) on spring migration at a stopover area. To control for possible temporal changes in parasite load or richness during the study period, we used the sedentary serin (Serinus serinus). Parasites hosted by garden warblers may have infected them at the breeding grounds, at the wintering grounds or at the stopovers [44], [45]. Garden warblers provide an ideal study case given that (1) all birds are strictly migrant in our study area (i.e. they do not breed or winter in the region) and (2) they are abundant during the migration period [46]. Due to the current lack of information, we also tested the assumption that protandry is reduced or does not occur in monomorphic and monochromatic species [47]. Our hypothesis is that parasites negatively affect the timing of migration due to their impact on host body condition. If migration is a condition-dependent process, we would expect to find an increase in parasite prevalence, load, and/or richness during the migratory period. Our results support the hypothesis that at least some parasites may negatively affect timing of migration.

Materials and Methods

The garden warbler is a passerine that winters in Central and Southern Africa and breeds throughout the Western Palaearctic [46]. Like all trans-Saharan migratory birds, garden warblers migrate long distances (around 6,000 km) and cross vast areas of unsuitable habitats such as sea and deserts [1], performing huge non-stop movements during pre-breeding migration [48]. Thus, their arrival date will depend on the timing of departure, the duration of the stopovers and on the distance between wintering and breeding areas [49]. In order to control for phenological changes in parasite loads that might bias our analyses, we also analyzed a resident species, the European serin, which inhabits similar habitats to the warblers in our study area. The logic behind including data for a resident species is that any relationship between parasites and date in a resident species will indicate that parasitic indexes vary with date independently of migratory phenology.

Sampling

A total of 187 garden warblers and 64 serins were captured during the 2004 pre-breeding migration period (from March to May) in a tree nursery in the outskirts of Seville, southern Spain (37° 23′ N, 5° 57″W). Birds were trapped from sunrise to sunset using twenty mist nets and were individually marked with numbered aluminum rings. Serins were sexed according to plumage characteristics (Svensson 1994) and garden warblers by molecular markers (see below). Blood (0.1 ml) from 183 garden warblers was taken from the jugular vein using 29 G sterile insulin syringes, placed in vials and stored at –20°C. Afterwards, birds were kept individually in clean cloth bags for 20 minutes to collect fecal samples (0.5–1.0 mg), which were placed in individually marked vials containing 5% formaldehyde. Fecal samples were obtained from 100 garden warblers and 64 serins. All birds were safely released immediately after sampling.

Ringing procedures were approved by the Spanish Ministry of Environment according to Ley 8/2003 (permit number 530394). Blood samples were taken with authorization of the Spanish Ministry of Environment (permit number 39/2003). All efforts were made to minimize suffering during handling and sample collecting, and birds were released in less than 30 minutes after their capture. According to Spanish law in 2004, no approval by Animal Care and Use Committee was needed for this field study (Ley 8/2003).

Laboratory Methods

Because garden warblers cannot be sexed by plumage characteristics [47], birds were sexed using molecular protocols [50]. DNA extraction followed a standard chloroform/isoamylalcohol method [51]. As well, molecular methods were used to detect and characterize the strains of avian malaria protozoa (i.e. Haemoproteus, Plasmodium, and Leucocytozoon). PCR amplifications were conducted by a nested protocol following Hellgren et al. [52]. Blank DNA extraction and positive and negative controls for PCR were included to detect contamination and false positives/negatives. All positive samples were sequenced using both Haem-F/Haem-R2 and Haem-FL/Haem-R2L primer pairs for Plasmodium/Haemoproteus and Leucocytozoon, respectively. PCR fragments were labeled by the BigDye 1.1 technology (Applied Biosystems). Sequences were resolved using an ABI 3130×l automated sequencer (Applied Biosystems).

Faeces were filtered through a double thickness of cotton-lint cheesecloth and scanned for eggs of endoparasites in a McMaster chamber. For each sample, 200 µl were dried and the dry weight of the feces was used to estimate the number of oocysts or eggs per mg of dry feces [53].

Statistical Analysis

The timing of migration was expressed as days from March 31 onwards and ranged between 1 and 49. The prevalence (proportion of positive cases in a group of birds) was calculated for all type of parasites, but quantification was only obtained for intestinal parasites. Parasite richness (total number of parasite groups infecting an individual) was estimated separately for blood (i.e. Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, and Leucocytozoon) and intestinal parasites (i.e. coccidians, spirurids, and others). Given that estimates of blood and intestinal parasitic indexes were not available for all individuals, the models for both groups of parasites were run separately. Blood parasite richness and intestinal parasite richness were not correlated (r = −0.01, F1, 69 = 0.001, p = 0.999). To test the relationship between the timing of migration and blood parasite prevalence and richness, we fitted a univariate generalized linear model (GLM) using SPSS 17.0 package (SPSS. Inc., Chicago) considering timing of migration as the dependent variable and sex, Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon prevalence (expressed as positive/negative) as factors, and blood parasite richness as covariate. All the two-way interactions between parasite parameters and sex were included in the initial model (see tables 1 and 2 ) and a stepwise backward model selection procedure was followed until all the independent variables remaining in the model increased model fit significantly at p-value <0.05. To test the relationship between timing of migration and intestinal parasite load and richness, we performed a GLM including timing of migration as dependent variable, log-transformed intestinal parasite loads (coccidian, spirurids, and other intestinal parasite loads) and intestinal parasite richness as covariates, and sex, and morning/afternoon effect (to make estimates of coccidian load reliable) [53] as factors. Bird gender was forced to remain in the final model. Interactions between morning/afternoon and coccidian load, as well as between sex and the intestinal parasite loads and richness were included in the initial model. Finally, a similar analysis was conducted with the serin dataset. Richness was not included in the serin analysis since only coccidians were found in serins.

thumbnail
Table 1. Relationships between migration time and blood parasite prevalence and richness.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061236.t001

thumbnail
Table 2. Relationships between migration time and blood parasite prevalence and richness.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061236.t002

Results

Blood parasites were detected in 66.1% of the 183 garden warblers sampled. The prevalence of Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, and Leucocytozoon were 15.8% (six different strains), 45.4% (six different strains), and 14.2% (five different strains), respectively (see Table 3). A total of 58.5% of the birds (87.7% of the infected individuals) were infected with just a single blood parasite species. Moreover, two Plasmodium-positive specimens were infected by more than one strain. Finally, 14 specimens were co-infected by more than one parasite genus (Table 3). Prevalence and richness of blood parasites were unrelated to the timing of migration (Table 1).

Intestinal parasites were found in 68% of the 100 fecal samples of garden warbler analyzed. The most frequent parasite species found were Protozoan coccidia identified as Isospora spp. and Nematoda spirurids identified as Tetrameres-like. Isospora are monoxenous intestinal protozoan [54], whereas Tetrameres are heteroxenous proventricular nematodes [55]. Some other species of trematodes, cestodes, and nematodes were included in the analyses grouped as ‘other parasites’ since they were found with a prevalence of less than 0.1%. The prevalence of Isospora, spirurids, and ‘other parasites’ reached 35%, 13.6%, and 13.6%, respectively. In total, 43.2% of garden warblers were infected with a single intestinal parasite group, 22.5% with two, and 3.9% with all three groups. In serins, only the coccidian Isospora spp. was found with a prevalence of 39.1%. Intestinal parasite richness was positively related to the timing of migration in garden warblers (Table 2; Fig. 1). The coccidian load was unrelated to date in serins (F1, 59 = 0.05; p = 0.82).

thumbnail
Figure 1. Changes in intestinal parasite richness.

Mean and 95% confidence interval for intestinal parasite richness in the seven weeks of the study period.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061236.g001

Finally, males arrived significantly earlier than females independently of their blood parasite prevalence or richness (arrival mean day ± standard error: 24.28±1.45 vs. 29.74±1.92; n = 183, Fig. 2).

thumbnail
Figure 2. Sexual differences in timing of migration.

Number of males (barred bars) and females (empty bars) Garden Warblers captured in each of the seven weeks of the study period.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061236.g002

Discussion

To the best of our knowledge, protandry had not been reported in a species lacking sexual size dimorphism or dichromatism. Our results show that protandry occurs in the garden warbler and males migrate on average 5.5 days ahead of females. This result highlights the need to incorporate data from monomorphic species on the comparative studies of the causes and consequences of protandric behavior. Interestingly, the difference in mean time of passage between males and females is one of the largest reported both for a trans-Saharan passerine and for a warbler from the genus Sylvia [16].

We failed to detect any significant relationship between blood parasites and the timing of migration. This suggests that blood parasites only have a minor impact on arrival dates in our study system, at least in comparison with the effects of intentinal parasites (note that sample size for both groups of parasites are high [56]). Our findings contrast to Rätti et al. [43], likely due to (1) the different protozoan genera found in each study (Trypanosoma is considered to produce stronger negative effects on host health than either Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, or Leucocytozoon [57], [58]) or to (2) a non-linear effect of blood parasites, with effects that may show up at or near the final destination and be negligible in a stopover area. Our results support the hypothesis that migration phenology is a condition-dependent trait and that there is a significant relationship between intestinal parasite richness and arrival dates (see Table 2). It is unlikely that the differences in passage time between males and females were related to differences in parasite richness, because the interaction between both variables was not significant. Under this scenario, the temporal gradient found in the richness of intestinal parasites could be caused by (1) earlier migration by individuals infected with fewer intestinal parasite species, (2) faster migration by less parasitized individuals, (3) a decrease in the ability to control intestinal parasites in individuals in the poorest condition that migrate later than those in prime condition, and/or (4) a north-south gradient in intestinal parasite load and diversity in wintering grounds (individuals wintering in the north of the wintering grounds being less parasitized and arriving earlier to the stopover area than those wintering in the south). Given both the broad distribution of intestinal parasites [54] and the diversity of wintering grounds [56], the last hypothesis seems unlikely. Thus, the positive correlation between intestinal parasite richness and the timing of migration could be caused by a combined negative effect of different intestinal parasite species on individual health status. Coccidians affect resource availability in hosts and thus hinder nutrient absorption [59], [60], [61], having little effect when resources are abundant [42], [62] but negative effects when resources are scarce [63], [64]. In fact, coccidian load was also positively related to passage date in the garden warblers in univariate analyses (F1, 96 = 4.67, p = 0.03), but this effect disappeared after controlling for parasite richness (see results). The negative results obtained with the resident serins in the same period exclude a confounding effect produced by a potential change in parasite richness or coccidian load through the spring. Given that the breeding cycle of serins is different from that of the garden warbler, our sampling period could not provide sufficient comparison base. It is important to note that serins were already breeding during the study period, and this may have obscured potential comparisons. However, all resident species were breeding at that time, and no better alternatives exist. Spirurids of the genus Tetrameres provoke gastric dysfunction when parasitic loads are high [65], [66]. The group catalogued as ‘other parasites’ includes many different intestinal parasites with potential effects on, for instance, digestive and respiratory dysfunctions [40]. Our results seem to support the theory that birds display lower ability to control multiple infestations than single ones. Increases in energy demands make individuals less able to control their infections [67]. Thus, higher intestinal parasite richness in late migrants may also be a consequence of the poorer condition of these migrants since they have to devote energies to limiting the effects of these pathogens [55], [68].

Overall, our results show that (1) protandry may occur in monomorphic passerines, (2) that timing of arrival at a stopover area seems influenced by parasite load, and that (3) by mating with early arriving males females will not only obtain the best territories [13] and/or parents [11] but also the mates with fewer parasites. Such results suggest that parasites may have an indirect effect on mate choice, even in species that are not brightly colored or have no obvious ornaments. Consequently, further observational and experimental studies on the likely influence of intestinal parasite richness on the fitness consequences of individual migration behavior are necessary if we are to shed light on the evolution of migration patterns in long-distance migration behavior in passerine birds.

Acknowledgments

Alberto Álvarez, Alicia Cortés, Ángel Mejía, Ara Villegas, Beatriz Fernández, Beatriz Sánchez, Carmen Gutiérrez, Chari Terceño, Cristina Sánchez, Elena Fierro, Enrique Sánchez, Esteban Serrano, Francisco Miranda, Grego Toral, Inma Cancio, Joaquín Díaz, José Antonio Sánchez, Mari Carmen Roque, Olga Jiménez, Pedro Sáez, Rafael Reina, Samuel del Río, Francisco Jamardo, Manuel Sánchez, Manuel Vázquez, Miguel Carrero, and Oscar González helped with fieldwork, ringing, manipulation of birds and sample taking. Isabel Martín helped with blood parasite molecular work.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: GL JM RS JF. Performed the experiments: GL JM JF. Analyzed the data: GL JM RS JF. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: GL JM RS JF. Wrote the paper: GL JM RS JF.

References

  1. 1. Alerstam T (1990) Bird Migration. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 420 p.
  2. 2. Klaassen M (1996) Metabolic constraints on long-distance migration in birds. J Exp Biol 199: 57–64.
  3. 3. Wikelski MM, Tarlow EM, Raim A, Diehl RH, Larkin RP, et al. (2003) Avian metabolism: Costs of migration in free-flying songbirds. Nature 423: 704.
  4. 4. Newton I (2006) Can conditions experienced during migration limit the population levels of birds? J Ornithol 147: 146–166.
  5. 5. Francis CM, Cooke F (1989) Differential timing of spring migration in wood warblers (Parulinae). Auk 103: 548–556.
  6. 6. Coppack T, Tøttrup AP, Spottiswoode C (2006) Degree of protandry reflects level of extrapair paternity in migratory songbirds. J Ornithol 147: 260–265.
  7. 7. Newton I (2008) The migration ecology of birds. London: Academic Press. 984 p.
  8. 8. Maggini I, Bairlein F (2012) Innate sex differences in the timing of spring migration in a songbird. PLoS ONE 7: e31271.
  9. 9. Morbey YE, Ydenberg RC (2001) Protandrous arrival timing to breeding areas: a review. Ecol Letters 4: 663–673.
  10. 10. Morbey YE, Coppack T, Pulido F (2012) Adaptive hypotheses for protandry in arrival to breeding areas: a review of models and empirical tests. J Ornithol 153: 207–215.
  11. 11. Forstmeier W (2002) Benefits of early arrival at breeding grounds vary between males. J Anim Ecol 71: 1–9.
  12. 12. Kokko H, Gunnarsson TG, Morrell LJ, Gill JA (2006) Why do female migratory birds arrive later than males? J Anim Ecol 75: 1293–1303.
  13. 13. Canal D, Jovani R, Potti J (2011) Multiple mating opportunities boost protandry in a pied flycatcher population. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 66: 67–76.
  14. 14. Møller AP, de Lope F, Saino N (2004) Parasitism, immunity, and arrival date in a migratory bird, the barn swallow. Ecology 85: 206–219.
  15. 15. Kissner KJ, Weatherhead PJ, Francis CM (2003) Sexual size dimorphism and timing of spring migration in birds. J Evol Biol 16: 154–162.
  16. 16. Rubolini D, Spina F, Saino N (2004) Protandry and sexual dimorphism in trans-Saharan migratory birds. Behav Ecol 15: 592–601.
  17. 17. Hasselquist DP (1998) Polygyny in great reed warblers: a long-term study of factors contributing to male fitness. Ecology 79: 2376–2390.
  18. 18. Lozano GA, Perreault S, Lemon RE (1996) Age, arrival date and reproductive success of male American redstarts Setophaga ruticilla. J Avian Biol 27: 164–170.
  19. 19. Potti JE (1998) Arrival time from spring migration in male pied flycatchers: individual consistency and familial resemblance. Condor 100: 702–708.
  20. 20. Bêty JJ, Gauthier GG, Giroux JF (2003) Body condition, migration, and timing of reproduction in snow geese: a test of the condition-dependent model of optimal clutch size. Am Nat 162: 110–21.
  21. 21. Smith RJ, Moore FR (2005) Arrival timing and seasonal reproductive performance in a long-distance migratory land bird. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 57: 231–239.
  22. 22. Møller AP (1994) Phenotype-dependent arrival time and its consequences in a migratory bird. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 35: 115–122.
  23. 23. Smith RJ, Moore FR (2003) Arrival fat and reproductive performance in a long-distance passerine migrant. Oecologia 134: 325–331.
  24. 24. Ninni P, de Lope F, Saino N, Haussy C, Møller AP (2004) Antioxidants and condition-dependence of arrival date in a migratory passerine. Oikos 105: 55–64.
  25. 25. Saino N, Szep T, Romano M, Rubolini D, Spina F, et al. (2004) Ecological conditions during winter predict arrival date at the breeding quarters in a trans-Saharan migratory bird. Ecol Letters 7: 21–25.
  26. 26. Reudink MW, Marra PP, Kyser TK, Boag PT, Langin KM, et al. (2009) Non-breeding season events influence sexual selection in a long-distance migratory bird. Proc Biol Sci 276: 1619–1626.
  27. 27. Alves JA, Gunnarsson TG, Potts PM, Gélinaud G, Sutherland WJ, et al. (2012) Overtaking on migration: does longer distance migration always incur a penalty? Oikos 121: 464–470.
  28. 28. Dawson RD, Bortolotti G (2000) Effects of hematozoan parasites on condition and return rates of American kestrels. Auk 117: 373–380.
  29. 29. Garvin MG, Szell GG, Moore FR (2006) Blood parasites of Neartic-Neotropical migrant passerine birds during spring trans-gulf migration: impact on host body condition. J Parasitol 92: 990–996.
  30. 30. Ashgar M, Hasselquist D, Bensch S (2011) Are chronic avian haemosporidian infections costly in wild birds? J Avian Biol 42: 530–537.
  31. 31. Carrete M, Serrano D, Illera JC, López G, Vögeli M, et al. (2009) Goats, birds, and emergent diseases: apparent and hidden effects of exotic species in an island environment. Ecol Appl 19: 840–853.
  32. 32. Spurgin L, Illera JC, Padilla DP, Richardson DS (2012) Biogeographical patterns and co-occurrence of pathogenic infection across island populations of Berthelot’s pipit (Anthus berthelotii). Oecologia 168: 691–701.
  33. 33. Figuerola J, Muñoz E, Gutiérrez R, Ferrer D (1999) Blood parasites, leucocytes and plumaje brightness in the Cirl Bunting Emberiza cirlus. Funct Ecol 13: 594–601.
  34. 34. Figuerola J, Domènech J, Senar JC (2003) Plumage colour is related to ecosymbiont load during moult in the serin Serinus serinus: an experimental study. Anim Behav 65: 551–557.
  35. 35. Merilae J, Sheldon BC, Lindstroem K (1999) Plumage brightness in relation to haematozoan infections in the greenfinch Carduelis chloris: Bright males are a good bet. Ecosci 6: 12–18.
  36. 36. Gustafsson L, Nordling D, Andersson MS, Sheldon BC, Qvarnstrom A (1994) Infectious diseases, reproductive effort and the cost of reproduction in birds. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 346: 323–331.
  37. 37. Marzal A, de Lope F, Navarro C, Møller AP (2005) Malarial parasites decrease reproductive success: an experimental study in a passerine bird. Oecologia 142: 541–545.
  38. 38. Sol D, Jovani R, Torres J (2003) Parasite mediated mortality and host immune response explain age-related differences in blood parasitism in birds. Oecologia 135: 542–547.
  39. 39. Lachish S, Knowles SCL, Alves R, Wood MJ, Sheldon BC (2011) Fitness effects of endemic malaria infections in a wild bird population: the importance of ecological structure. J Anim Ecol 80: 1196–1206.
  40. 40. Atkinson CT, Thomas NJ, Hunter DB (2008) Parasitic Diseases of Wild Birds. Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, UK.
  41. 41. Merino S, Moreno J, Sanz JJ, Arriero E (2000) Are avian blood parasites pathogenic in the wild? A medication experiment in blue tits (Parus caeruleus). Proc Biol Sci 267: 2507–2510.
  42. 42. Friend M, Franson JC (1999) Field Manual of Wildlife Diseases: General Field Procedures and Diseases of Birds. Available: http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/publications/field_manual. Accessed 2001.
  43. 43. Rätti OY, Dufva R, Alantalo RV (1993) Blood parasites and male fitness in the pied flycatcher. Oecologia 96: 410–414.
  44. 44. Hellgren O, Waldenström J, Peréz-Tris J, Szöll E, Si Ö, et al. (2007) Detecting shifts of transmission areas in avian blood parasites - a phylogenetic approach. Mol Ecol 16: 1281–1290.
  45. 45. Fransson T, Barboutis C, Mellroth R, Akriotis T (2008) When and where to fuel before crossing the Sahara desert – extended stopover and migratory fuelling in first-year garden warblers Sylvia borin. J Avian Biol 39: 133–138.
  46. 46. Cramp S, Perrins CM (1994) Handbook of the birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, Vol VI. The birds of the Western Paleartic. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 736 p.
  47. 47. Svensson L, (1994) Identification guide to European passerines. Sweden: Svensson. 368 p.
  48. 48. Grattarola A, Spina F, Pilastro A (1999) Spring migration of the Garden Warbler (Sylvia borin) across the Mediterranean Sea. J Ornithol 140: 413–419.
  49. 49. Tøttrup AP, Klaasen RHG, Kristensen MW, Standberg R, Vardanis Y, et al. (2012) Drought in Africa caused delayed arrival of European songbirds. Science 338: 1307.
  50. 50. Griffiths R, Double MC, Orr K, Dawson RJG (1998) A DNA test to sex most birds. Mol Ecol 7: 1071–1075.
  51. 51. Gemmell NJ, Akiyama S (1996) An efficient method for the extraction of DNA from vertebrate tissues. Trends Genet 12: 338–339.
  52. 52. Hellgren O, Waldenström J, Bensch S (2004) A new PCR assay for simultaneous studies of Leucocytozoon, Plasmodium, and Haemoproteus from avian blood. J Parasitol 90: 797–802.
  53. 53. López G, Figuerola J, Soriguer R (2007) Time of day, age, and feeding habits influence coccidian oocyst shedding in wild passerines. Int J Parasitol 37: 559–564.
  54. 54. Greiner EC (2008) Coccidian, Atoxoplasma, and Sarcocystis. In: Atkinson CT, Thomas NJ, Hunter DB, editors. Parasitic Diseases of Wild Birds. New York: Wiley-Blackwell. 108–119.
  55. 55. Mollhagen TR (1991) A study of the parasitic nematode genus Tetrameres. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press. 76 p.
  56. 56. Jovani R, Tella JL (2006) Parasite prevalence and sample size: misconceptions and solutions. Trends Parasitol 22: 214–218.
  57. 57. Ricklefs RE, Fallon SM, Latta SC, Swanson BL, Berminham E (2005) Migrants and their parasites. A bridge between two worlds. In: Greenberg R, Marra P, editors. Birds of two worlds: the ecology and evolution of migration. Maryland: The Johns Hopkins University Press. 210–221.
  58. 58. Arriero E, Møller AP (2008) Host ecology and life-history traits associated with blood parasite species richness in birds. J Evol Biol 21: 1504–1513.
  59. 59. Allen P (1987) Physiological responses of chicken gut tissue to coccidial infection: comparative effects of Eimeria acervulina and Eimeria mitis on mucosal mass, carotenoid content, and brush border enzyme activity. Poult Sci 66: 1306–1315.
  60. 60. Allen P (1992) Long segmented filamentous organisms in broiler chickens: Possible relationship to reduced serum carotenoids. Poult Sci 71: 1615–1625.
  61. 61. Tyczkowski J, Hamilton P, Ruff M (1991) Altered metabolism of carotenoids during pale-bird syndrome in chickens infected with Eimeria acervulina. Poult Sci 70: 2074–2081.
  62. 62. Weatherhead PJ, Bennett GF (1992) Ecology of parasitism of brown-headed cowbirds by haematozoa. Can J Zool 70: 1–7.
  63. 63. Ots I, Hõrak P (1998) Health impact of blood parasites in breeding great tits. Oecologia 116: 441–448.
  64. 64. Ilmonen P, Hakkarainen H, Koivunen V, Korppimäki E, Mullie A, et al. (1999) Parental effort and blood parasitism in Tengmalm’s owl: effects of natural and experimental variation in food abundance. Oikos 86: 79–86.
  65. 65. Appleton CC (1983) Tetrameriasis in crested guineafowl from Natal. Ostrich: J African Ornithol 54: 238–240.
  66. 66. Mowlavi GR, Massoud J, Mobedi I, Gharagozlou MJ, Rezaian M, et al. (2006) Tetrameres (Tetrameres) grusi (Shumakovich, 1946) (Nematoda: Tetrameridae) in Eurasian Cranes (Grus grus) in Central Iran. J Wildlife Dis 42: 397–401.
  67. 67. Oppliger A, Christe P, Richner H (1997) Clutch size and malarial parasites in female great tits. Behav Ecol 8: 148–152.
  68. 68. Sorci G, Cornet S (2010) Immunity and Virulence in Bird-Parasite Interactions. Open Ornithol J 3: 33–40.