Insect ectoparasites on wild birds in the Czech Republic during the pre-breeding period

Wild passerine birds (Passeriformes) from the northeastern part of the Czech Republic were examined for ectoparasites during the pre-breeding period in 2007. Two species of fleas of the genera Ceratophyllus and Dasypsyllus (Siphonaptera: Ceratophyllidae), and 23 species of chewing lice belonging to the genera Ricinus, Myrsidea, Menacanthus (Phthiraptera: Menoponidae), Brueelia, Penenirmus, and Philopterus (Phthiraptera: Philopteridae) were found on 108 birds of 16 species. Distribution of insect ectoparasites found on wild birds during pre-breeding was compared with previous data from the post-breeding period. There was no difference in total prevalence of chewing lice in prebreeding and post-breeding periods. Higher prevalence of fleas and slightly higher mean intensity of chewing lice were found on birds during the pre-breeding period. There was a significant difference in total prevalence but equal mean intensity of chewing lice on resident and migrating birds.


INTRODUCTION
E ctoparasites, including chewing lice, can impact upon body condition, fitness, ability to fly or even long-term survival of their hosts. The impact of ectoparasites on energetics may also be responsible for significant drop in the rate of male courtship display, and thus in the ability of heavily infested males to attract mates (see Price et al., 2003 for review). On the other hand, almost nothing is known about the role of ectoparasites in bird migration, and in particular regarding small transcontinental passerine birds (Passeriformes). In a previous paper (Sychra et al., 2008), we presented new data on the species richness and distribution of insect ectoparasites found on some passerine birds in the Czech Republic during the post-breeding period. The aims of this paper are: (1) to present new data on the distribution of insect ectoparasites found on some wild birds in the Czech Republic during pre-breeding migration; (2) to include information on their prevalence, intensity and abundance; and (3) to compare distribution of insect ectoparasites found on wild birds during pre-breeding and post-breeding periods.

STUDY AREAS
F ieldwork was carried out in a forest aisle adjacent to pasture located in the Sub-Beskidian Hills, near Čert'ák (49°34'N, 17°59'E) at an elevation of about 400 m above sea level at the same place where we had worked in 2005(Sychra et al., 2008.

METHODS
Birds were examined during the main season of prebreeding migrations from 31 March to 28 April 2007. Birds were examined and chewing lice collected as described elsewhere (Sychra et al., 2008). Identifica-Original contribution Parasite, 2011, 18, 13-19  tion of the lice was based on papers by Price (1977), Rheinwald (1968) and Zlotorzycka (1976Zlotorzycka ( , 1977. The nomenclature of the lice follows Price et al. (2003). Identification of the fleas was based on a paper by Rosický (1957). The taxonomy of the birds follows Dickinson (2003).
The following parasitological parameters are evaluated in this paper: (1) Richness is the number of species of ectoparasites on a host taxon; (2) Host specificity is the range of host taxa infested by a given ectoparasite taxon; (3) Dominance is the number of individuals of a parasite species as a percentage of the total number of individuals collected from examined birds; (4) Prevalence is the proportion of the members of a taxon infested with ectoparasites; (5) Mean intensity is number of individuals of a particular ectoparasite species on infested hosts; and (6) Mean abundance is number of individuals of a particular ectoparasite species on examined birds (Marshall, 1981;Bush et al., 1997). For purposes of statistical analysis, we divided the birds into two groups: resident and migrating. Included into the analysis were only species of birds with at least ten examined individuals. Resident birds are birds with no or only short-distance post-breeding movement. These included Turdus merula, Emberiza citrinella, Parus major, Cyanistes caeruleus, Periparus ater and Coccothraustes coccothraustes. Most of these birds usually overwinter in the Czech Republic (Cepák et al., 2008). Migrating birds are birds with long-distance migration. These were Turdus philomelos, Fringilla coelebs, Erithacus rubecula, Sylvia atricapilla, Phylloscopus collybita, Prunella modularis and Ficedula hypoleuca.
The majority of them overwinter in the Mediterranean, but some of them are even transcontinental migrants (Cepák et al., 2008). Birds with extremely high num-bers of chewing lice (one Turdus merula was parasitized with 444 specimens of Brueelia merulensis) or which were examined in extreme high number (Erithacus rubecula, n = 281 and Sylvia atricapilla, n = 114) were not included into the analysis.
There was no difference in total prevalence of chewing lice in pre-breeding and post-breeding periods (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.528). Higher prevalence of fleas (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.053) and slightly higher total mean intensity of chewing lice (Mann-Whitney U test, p = 0.059) were found on birds during the pre-breeding period. The overall age ratio of lice differs in both periods, with an adult-biased ratio in the post-breeding period and immature-biased ratio in the pre-breading period.
While only adult birds were examined in the prebreeding period, a higher prevalence of chewing lice had been found on young birds in the post-breeding period (16.4 %, n = 92 against 5.4 %, n = 170; Fisher's exact test, p = 0.011).
Five species of birds were parasitized with chewing lice in both years when the sampling was carried out: Sylvia atricapilla, Turdus merula, Turdus philomelos, Troglodytes troglodytes and Pyrrhula pyrrhula. Except for Turdus merula and Troglodytes troglodytes, different species of lice and total prevalence of chewing lice were found in these birds in the pre-breeding and post-breeding periods (Table III).

DISCUSSION
L ouse flies had been commonly found on birds in central Europe during their post-breeding migration (Sychra et al., 2008). Because of their life cycle, no louse flies were found on wild birds during their pre-breeding migration. This fact explains the marked difference in total insect parasite prevalence among birds examined in spring and in autumn (16.4 % against 31.3 %). We found higher prevalence of fleas, Ceratophyllus gallinae and Dasypsyllus gallinulae, in birds during the pre-breeding period. Bird fleas usually overwinter in the larval or pupal stages away from the birds' bodies, generally in bird nests but possibly also on the ground below the old nests. Adult fleas then remain in the cocoon until stimulated to hatch by, for example,  warmth, exhaled carbon dioxide and vibration caused by birds when they start breed in the nest (Rosický, 1957) or when birds are moving near to cocoons on the ground. Birds searching for food on the ground can be infected by freshly hatched fleas. That is why the finding of fleas on the bodies of birds is more likely in spring than in autumn. The prevalence and intensity of chewing lice recorded in the present study are basically the same as those recorded in the post-breeding period (Sychra et al., 2008). However, there is a slight tendency toward higher mean intensity of infestation on birds during the pre-breeding period. Prevalence of chewing lice as permanent ectoparasites is significantly influenced by the possibilities they have to spread to new hosts.
In the breeding period, the most frequent is the horizontal route, i.e. transfer between two adult birds during, e.g., mating (Price et al., 2003). Chewing lice populations are known to grow in size in spring as a result of the onset of their hosts' breeding period. This may be the explanation for slightly higher bird infestation with chewing lice in spring. The vertical chewing lice transfer route, i.e. from adults to young, is activated during the nesting period. Thanks to that, the chewing lice prevalence usually decreases on adults and conversely increases on young birds during this period (Price et al., 2003). The differences ascertained in chewing lice prevalence on young and adult birds seem to corroborate these assumptions. Prior to migration, birds' condition improves and birds in good condition may control larger amounts of parasites more easily (Marshal, 1981;Price et al., 2003). In accordance with these assumptions, chewing lice abundance before migration is low. The energy cost of migration is very high for birds, and, when they reach their wintering sites, the birds must therefore spend more time on feeding at the cost of other activities, including preening, which may result in an increase in chewing lice abundance (Rózsa, 1997;Price et al., 2003). External conditions of wintering sites may be considerably different from those at the birds' nest sites. These different conditions, and higher relative air humidity at wintering sites in particular, may have a positive effect on chewing lice abundance. Species occurring over a large territory are known to harbor larger chewing lice populations in areas with higher ambient humidity than in arid areas, which is also true for individual birds of the same species (Fabiyi, 1996;Moyer et al., 2002). In the post-nesting period, a number of avian species also change their social behavior. During this period, the strictly territorial species tend to gather in flocks where more frequent contacts between individual birds are likely (Hudec, 1983). Such a situation, too, acts to favor higher chewing lice abundance (Rózsa, 1997). It may therefore be assumed that chewing lice abundance increases among birds at wintering sites. However, there are almost no studies to date into parasite incidence among migratory avian species. The findings of Brooke & Nakamura (1999) seem to indicate that that assumption might be correct. The major factors that might explain marked differences in chewing lice incidence figures in resident and migratory bird species are: (1) the dynamics of chewing lice populations, and (2) the fact of bird migration. With regard to the first of these factors, at the time of year when the sampling was carried out (April) most of the resident species are already nesting (Hudec, 1983). It is therefore possible that the increase in parasite abundance comes earlier in resident birds than in migratory species, because the latter are only on their way to their nesting sites at that time. Foster (1969) had mentioned that higher occurrence of chewing lice on adult birds during the breeding period may be influenced by the production of reproductive hormones. Photoperiod is another factor that plays a crucial role in the timing of birds' breeding seasons, and especially for resident birds (Perrins, 1970). A question is whether photoperiod also can play a role in the timing of chewing lice breeding. Some chewing lice species are known to survive their hosts' migration period as eggs (Price et al., 2003). The majority of chewing lice species prefer to lay eggs in those areas on the hosts' bodies where they will be best protected against the hosts' preening, i.e. on the neck or between feather shafts (Price et al., 2003). If that is the case, then chewing lice nymphs should outnumber adult chewing lice at the time when birds arrive to their nesting sites. The differences found in nymphs-toadults ratios in populations of migratory and resident birds seem to corroborate that assumption. With regard to the second factor mentioned above, migration affects the overall condition of migrating birds, and the higher numbers of ectoparasites, including chewing lice, may negatively affect the hosts' chances for safe return to the nesting site. Birds in poor condition or those with higher parasite loads may have already perished in the early stages of the migration (Cork et al., 2001). In their multi-year study of cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota), Brown et al. (1995) found that chewing lice together with other ectoparasites may significantly influence the return rate of parasite-infested birds from wintering sites to their nesting sites. The very low prevalence of chewing lice on Erithacus rubecula (0.4-1.8 %) and Sylvia atricapilla (0.8 %), the two hosts with the highest number of individuals examined, seem to corroborate that assumption. The overall prevalence of chewing lice on E. rubecula was 3.6 % (n = 281), however, which prevalence was quite similar to the 7 % (n = 14) for birds examined in England and 0 % (n = 49) for birds examined in Original contribution Parasite, 2011, 18, 13-19 Sweden as recorded by Ash (1960). That author had mentioned that chewing lice usually occur throughout the entire range of their hosts, but that should they for some reason not occur in a certain locality their establishment there is likely to be extremely slow. Aside from local distribution of chewing lice, there can be different rates of infestation also between years. During the course of the present work, some birds that had been trapped uninfested had later been retrapped and found to be infested (Table II). They could either have acquired chewing lice from some other individual of the same species or the chewing lice may have occurred in very low intensity on these birds and thus been overlooked during earlier examinations (see also Ash, 1960). There could be many factors influencing the occurrence, prevalence and mean intensity of infestation by ectoparasites. Our results indicate that ectoparasites, including chewing lice, may play a role in bird migration, and especially in small transcontinental passerine birds. More data and experimental surveys are needed to resolve how important is this phenomenon for wild bird populations.