Bulgarella et al. Philornis Pterin Data
2022-01-12
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2015-02-01
2020-02-18
2020-02-18
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2021-09-19
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Bulgarella et al. Philornis Pterin Data
Published Date
2022-01-12
Author Contact
Heimpel, George E
heimp001@umn.edu
heimp001@umn.edu
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Experimental Data
Field Study Data
Experimental Data
Field Study Data
Abstract
Parasites of seasonally available hosts must persist through times of the year when hosts are unavailable. In tropical environments, host availability is often linked to rainfall, and adaptations of parasites to dry periods remain understudied. The bird-parasitic fly Philornis downsi has invaded the Galapagos Islands and is causing high mortality of Darwin’s finches and other bird species, and the mechanisms by which it was able to invade the islands successfully are of great interest to conservationists. In the dry lowlands, this fly persists over a seven-month cool season when availability of hosts is very limited. We tested the hypothesis that adult flies could survive from one bird-breeding season until the next by using a pterin-based age-grading method to estimate the age of P. downsi captured during and between bird-breeding seasons. This study showed that significantly older flies were present towards the end of the cool season, with ~5% of captured females exhibiting estimated ages greater than seven months. However, younger flies also occurred during the cool season suggesting that some reproduction occurs when host availability is low. We discuss the possible ecological mechanisms that could allow for a such a mixed strategy.
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This submission contains 7 CSV or text files with data presented and analyzed in the manuscript by Bulgarella et al. titled, 'Persistence of the invasive bird-parasitic fly Philornis downsi over the host interbreeding period in the Galapagos Islands'.
Referenced by
Bulgarella M, Lincango MP, Lahuatte PF, Oliver JD, Cahuana A, Ramírez IE, Sage R, Colwitz AJ, Freund DA, Miksanek JR, Moon RD, Causton CE & Heimpel GE. 2022. Persistence of the invasive bird-parasitic fly Philornis downsi over the host interbreeding period in the Galapagos Islands. Scientific Reports
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-06208-5
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-06208-5
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Galapagos Conservancy, International Community Foundation (with a grant awarded by the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust), Lindblad Expeditions-National Geographic
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Bulgarella, M; Heimpel, George E; Lincango, MP; Lahuatte, PF; Oliver, JD; Cahuana, A; Ramírez, IE; Sage, R; Colwitz, AJ; Freund, DA; Miksanek, JR; Moon, RD; Causton, CE. (2022). Bulgarella et al. Philornis Pterin Data. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/7zyy-0125.
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Bulgarella et al. pupal categories.csv
Organization of collected puparia into categories
(12.47 KB)
Bulgarella et al. pupal dissections.csv
Organization of dissected puparia into categories
(53.7 KB)
Bulgarella et al. pterin LabvField.csv
Data showing pterin calibration in a lab versus field setting
(1.24 KB)
Bulgarella et al. pterin Fig 3a.csv
Data on estimates for age of field-caught flies for Fig. 3a
(21.82 KB)
Bulgarella et al. pterin field ages.csv
Data on estimates for field ages for GAM analyses
(52.26 KB)
Bulgarella et al. pterin dissection data.csv
Data on egg loads and spermathecal fullness
(15.52 KB)
WeekyPrecipsForR.txt
Precipitation data
(6.84 KB)
Readme_226020_v2.txt
Readme description of the data
(6.07 KB)
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