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Immune response impairs learning in free-flying bumble-bees

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posted on 2008-11-17, 14:32 authored by A. Alghamdi, L. Dalton, A. Phillis, Ezio Rosato, Eamonn B. Mallon
Parasites can influence different host behaviours including foraging, mate choice and predator avoidance. Several recent papers have shown reduced learning abilities in infected insects. However, it is difficult to separate the effects of the immune response from the direct effects of the parasite. Using a free-flying learning paradigm, this paper shows that learning performance is impaired in bumble-bees (Bombus terrestris) that are not infected but whose immune system is stimulated non-pathogenically. This demonstrates that before it is assumed that a parasite has a direct effect on a host's behaviour, the effect of the immune response stimulated by the parasite must first be quantified.

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Citation

Biology Letters, 2008, 4 (5), pp. 479-481.

Published in

Biology Letters

Publisher

Royal Society

issn

1744-9561

Copyright date

2008

Available date

2008-11-17

Publisher version

http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/4/5/479

Language

en

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