PARASITES BENEFIT THEIR HOSTS —
AT THE SPECIES LEVEL
Post #7
Donald A. Windsor
PO Box 604, Norwich NY 13815 USA
Why do hosts keep getting parasitized?
That big question bothers me because, surely, throughout all the eons
of time that life has evolved on this planet, some host species would
have managed to break free from the perpetual shackle of parasites.
But no. Every free-living species has some other species
parasitizing it. Why? It seems as if hosts are addicted to
parasites.
The standard answer is the “arms race”. Whenever the host
develops a better defense, the parasite develops a better offense.
This arms race goes on in perpetuity. While accepting this answer, I
suspect that there is more to it.
Perhaps parasites confer some benefit to their hosts. I have been
trying to figure out what that benefit could possibly be. Finally, I
think I have found it. Parasites help their hosts survive —
but at the species level —
not at the individual level.
What is good for a population may not be good for its individual
members. For example, it is good for our society that each of us pay
taxes. However, it is certainly not good for us as individuals. But
we taxpayers do expect that our taxes will benefit us. Taxes are, in
effect, the expense we pay for government.
Parasites, by definition, are symbionts that benefit themselves at
the expense of their hosts. So, what are the hosts buying by paying
these expenses? Survival. That is my claim based on my observations
of host-parasite interrelationships. The reason is that parasites
can harm their hosts, especially when their populations increase.
But, it is the individual hosts that are harmed. The population, as
a whole, can sometimes benefit from the loss of individuals. To be
sustainable, ecosystems must have a way to regulate the populations
of their members. When monocultures get too large, and competition
and predation are not adequate to limit them, diseases break out.
A good example of how a deadly parasite can help its host species
survive is anthrax. Caused by the bacterium, Bacillus anthracis,
this disease plays an important ecological role in nature. B.
anthracis spores lie dormant in the soil. When a grazer, such as
a bison, uproots a tuft of grass, it disturbs the spores and
contaminates itself. The spores may be touched, ingested, or
inhaled. The infected animal is able to wander around symptom free
for a few days before the disease disables it. Once it does, the
animal dies. Meanwhile, the B.
anthracis multiply rapidly, building up a
high population. When the nutrients run out, the waste products
build up, and the carcass condition becomes uninhabitable, the B.
anthracis sporulate. As the carcass
decomposes, the spores gravitate into the enriched soil. Plants move
in and cover the site. From the perspective of the individual
grazer, B.
anthracis is indeed a deadly parasite.
However, when viewed from the perspective of the grassland ecosystem,
B.
anthracis is the guardian of the prairie.
Grazers that nip grass blades without pulling up the roots have a
much better chance of avoiding anthrax. Likewise, land that is not
overgrazed will have more lush foliage for grazers to nibble and more
decaying plant remains to bury the spores even deeper. That is, with
B.
anthracis spores in the ground, overgrazed
land is deadlier to grazers. A
field that is overgrazed will have patches of bare ground between the
surviving tufts of grasses and forbs. During dry periods, dust
containing anthrax spores and can be ingested and/or inhaled by the
grazer. As the grazers die off, the field can recover. Later, when
it is eventually overgrazed again, the latent anthrax spores will
once more defend it. Perhaps this
is a natural way in which grassland ecosystems regulate themselves.
They punish overgrazers by imposing a death penalty.
There are several other ways that parasite species can benefit host
species. I am currently preparing a full article, with references,
on this subject, but some of the more elusive concepts still need
clarification and more examples are being researched.
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