Parasite-mediated inbreeding depression in wild red deer
Adam Z. Hasik, Anna M. Hewett, Katie Maris, Sean J. Morris, Ali Morris, Gregory F. Albery, Josephine M. Pemberton

TL;DR
This study shows how inbreeding in wild red deer reduces survival through parasitism and other factors.
Contribution
The study identifies parasite-mediated inbreeding depression in wild red deer using genomic and longitudinal data.
Findings
Inbreeding reduces juvenile survival via strongyle nematode parasites independently of birth weight effects.
Inbreeding lowers overwinter survival in reproductive adult red deer.
Three distinct pathways of inbreeding depression are identified, including parasitism.
Abstract
Inbreeding depression is the reduction in fitness of inbred individuals relative to their more outbred counterparts. Parasitism also reduces fitness and is a route by which inbreeding depression may operate, yet the complete pathway from inbreeding to parasitism to fitness has almost never been documented in the wild. We investigated parasite-mediated inbreeding depression in a wild population of a large mammal (red deer, Cervus elaphus), using high-quality individual-level data on fitness in juveniles and adult females, longitudinal infection data for three gastrointestinal helminth parasites, and genomic inbreeding coefficients. We found evidence for parasite-mediated inbreeding depression via strongyle nematodes in juvenile survival, independent of direct adverse effects of inbreeding on survival and indirect effects of inbreeding on survival via birth weight. Inbreeding also reduced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation · Genetic diversity and population structure
