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Parasitology. 2024 Feb; 151(2): 191–199.
Published online 2023 Dec 20. doi: 10.1017/S0031182023001294
PMCID: PMC10941040
PMID: 38116659

Multivariate study of lice (Insecta: Psocodea: Phthiraptera) assemblages hosted by hummingbirds (Aves: Trochilidae)

Associated Data

Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement

Keywords: Abundance, d-correlation, elevation, migration, multivariate study, ordination, prevalence, sexual dimorphism, Trochiliphagus, Trochiloecetes

Abstract

Lice were collected from 579 hummingbirds, representing 49 species, in 19 locations in Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras, Paraguay and Peru, at elevations 0–3000 m above sea level. The following variables were included in an ecological analysis (1) host species' mean body mass, sexual size dimorphism, sexual dichromatism, migratory behaviour and dominance behaviour; (2) mean elevation, mean and predictability of temperature, mean and predictability of precipitation of the host species' geographic area; (3) prevalence and mean abundance of species of lice as measures of infestation. Ordination methods were applied to evaluate data structure. Since the traits are expressed at different scales (nominal, interval and ratio), a principal component analysis based on d-correlations for the traits and a principal coordinates analysis based on the Gower index for species were applied. Lice or louse eggs were found on 80 (13.8%) birds of 22 species. A total of 267 lice of 4 genera, Trochiloecetes, Trochiliphagus, Myrsidea and Leremenopon, were collected, with a total mean intensity of 4.6. There were positive interactions between migration behaviour and infestation indices, with elevational migrants having a higher prevalence and abundance of lice than resident birds. Further, we found weak negative correlations between host body mass and infestation indices and positive correlations between mean elevation and prevalence and abundance of Trochiliphagus. Thus, formerly unknown differences in the ecological characteristics and infestation measures of Trochiliphagus and Trochiloecetes lice were revealed, which allows a better understanding of these associations and their potential impacts on hummingbirds.

Introduction

Parasitic lice (Psocodea: Phthiraptera) are among the most common members of the avian ectoparasite fauna. They complete their whole life cycle on the skin surface and in the plumage of birds, and they are primarily transmitted through direct body-to-body contact between birds (Johnson and Clayton, 2003). They constitute ideal model organisms to study the ecology of contagious pathogens simply because they are relatively large, easily found, observed, collected and counted even by the naked eye.

In comparisons across species, the prevalence (proportion of infested individuals) and mean abundance (mean number of parasites per host) of lice typically covary positively with host body size (Rothschild and Clay, 1952; Rózsa, 1997). This prompts the question of which host traits, and which environmental variables affect lice assemblages of hummingbirds – the smallest birds on Earth.

Three hundred and sixty-six species of hummingbirds (Trochilidae) have been recognized (Gill et al., 2023). Despite this relatively large number of host species, only 50 species of 4 genera of lice – Leremenopon, Myrsidea, Trochiloecetes and Trochiliphagus – have been described so far from only 37 (10%) species of hummingbirds (Dalgleish and Price, 2003a, 2003b; Price et al., 2003). Recently, Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) documented the presence of louse eggs on 291 (80%) species, indicating that current knowledge about louse communities associated with hummingbirds is still scarce and incomplete.

Leremenopon and Myrsidea belong to the family Menoponidae. Menoponids are widespread on many other avian taxa, but scarce on hummingbirds, having extremely low prevalences (<1%) with mostly 1 louse per bird (Dalgleish and Price, 2003a, 2003b; Oniki-Willis et al., 2023).

On the other hand, members of the family Ricinidae are specialized to small-bodied hosts, namely small-bodied (or, less frequently, medium-sized) passerines and hummingbirds (Harnos et al., 2016). However, if related to host size, they are large bodied themselves. Two genera occur on hummingbirds, Trochiliphagus and Trochiloecetes, which are more frequent (prevalence often between 5 and 15%) than menoponids. They consume host blood, an exceptional feeding strategy for avian lice (Clay, 1949; Carriker, 1960). Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) documented that the co-occurrence of 2 genera on the same host individual was more frequent than expected by chance. However, the reasons for this positive covariation are unknown, because this analysis was based on eggshells collected from museum specimens. No further information is available on the parasites' impact on hummingbirds or the environmental factors that may affect their distribution and abundance.

Almost nothing is known about the host-specificity of ricinid lice infesting hummingbirds. While Price et al. (2003) and former authors treated species of both genera as strictly host-specific, Rheinwald (2007) suggested that all 13 known species of Trochiliphagus are, in fact, the same species. Moreover, he suggested that this species belongs to the genus Ricinus – a genus including only host-generalist lice of Passerines (Price et al., 2003). This debate is rooted in the uncertainty of the species concept in parasitology (Mey, 1998; Gustafsson and Najer, 2022). Rheinwald (2007) based his study on investigation of only 2 Trochiliphagus specimens from the same host, and did not examine any of the type material. Therefore, until proper morphometric revision of type material of Trochiliphagus species and genetic analysis of specimens from different hummingbirds are provided, we consider Rheinwald's hypothesis insufficiently supported (see also Valan et al., 2016).

The purpose of the present study is to explore host traits and environmental variables potentially affecting the louse communities of hummingbirds in Central and South America.

Materials and methods

Lice were collected from hummingbirds mist netted from July to September 2004–2014 in 19 locations in Costa Rica, Brazil, Honduras, Paraguay and Peru (Additional file 1: Table S1). These collection sites were situated in primary rainforests, pastures or gardens near forests at elevations from 0 to 3000 m above sea level (a.s.l.) (Additional file 1: Table S1). Mist nets were inspected every 30–40 minutes, and captured hummingbirds were placed into separate cloth bags. Hummingbird identification was based on illustrated identification field guides (Stiles and Skutch, 1989; Howell and Webb, 1995; Narosky and Yzurieta, 2006, 2010; Sigrist, 2006; Garrigues, 2007; Gwynne et al., 2010; Schulenberg et al., 2010), while their taxonomy and nomenclature follow Gill et al. (2023).

The fumigation chamber method was applied to collect lice from the birds, using chloroform as a fumigant for 5–7 min (Clayton and Drown, 2001). This was complemented by a visual search of the head for the occurrence of louse eggs. Contrary to Oniki-Willis et al. (2023), eggs or nits (the empty chorions of hatched eggs) were not identified to the genus level. Birds were released immediately after examination. Lice were stored in 96% ethanol and slide-mounted in Canada balsam as permanent slides.

Host species were characterized by their mean body mass (male and female masses averaged), based on del Hoyo et al. (1999). Male body mass was regressed over female body mass, and the residuals from this regression line were used as the index of sexual size dimorphism (SSD). The body mass and SSD values of Stephanoxis loddigesii were apparently affected by a typographical error and, therefore, excluded from the analysis. Binary categorization for sexual dichromatism (different colouration of males and females) was adopted from Diamant et al. (2021). In the case of 4 species (Amazilia rutila, Amazilia tzacatl, Heliomaster constantii and Saucerottia hoffmanni), dichromatism categorization was modified based on the authors' field experiences and the literature (see list of publications in Additional file 1: Text S1). To quantify potentially relevant aspects of host behaviour, 2 alternative indices to categorize migration (both obtained from del Hoyo et al., 1999) were included. To describe the behaviourally dominant nature (aggressive against rival species or not) of hummingbird species, the binary categorization of Bribiesca et al. (2019) was applied.

Geographic area for each species (and not the actual collection sites) was characterized by mean elevation (a.s.l.), mean and predictability of temperature, and mean and predictability of precipitation. All these data were obtained from Diamant et al. (2021). In the following 4 cases, names of different taxa were applied:

  • Eugenes spectabilis was formerly treated as a subspecies, i.e., E. fulgens spectabilis. Therefore, data of E. fulgens were used for this taxon;
  • Saucerottia hoffmanni was formerly treated as a subspecies, i.e., S. saucerottei hoffmanni. Therefore, data of Saucerottia saucerottei were used for this taxon;
  • To characterize Phaethornis striigularis, data were obtained from del Hoyo et al. (1999), except for temperature and precipitation, which were assessed by adopting the data of Phaethornis longirostris, a species having a similar area of distribution (del Hoyo et al., 1999);
  • To characterize Colibri cyanotus, data were obtained from del Hoyo et al. (1999), except for temperature and precipitation, which were taken from Colibri delphinae, a species inhabiting a similar distribution area (del Hoyo et al., 1999).

Other relevant literature (Additional file 1: Text S1) was also used to confirm these decisions.

Prevalence (the proportion of infested individuals) and mean abundance (mean number of lice per host individual, including 0 values of non-infested birds) were calculated separately for each genus of parasite found infesting all hummingbird species. Further, treating all taxa of lice as members of the same ecological guild, the prevalence and mean abundance were calculated pooled for all the lice together. There were 2 different ways to quantify the prevalence of all lice. First, only present infestations were considered (all birds that harboured adults and/or nymphs). Then, past infestations were also added to the infested category by including those birds which harboured only eggs or nits in their plumage. This latter method includes present and former infestations that might have already disappeared at the time of collection. This might also include birds on which hatched lice were undetected by the collection techniques used. This latter index of prevalence (with eggs and nits considered) was calculated only when data for all lice were pooled into a guild, but not for louse genera taken separately (because eggs were not identified to genus level). Fisher's exact test was applied to compare prevalences and bootstrap 2-sample t-test was used to compare mean intensities (the number of lice per infested host). Calculations were carried out using Quantitative Parasitology 3.0 (Rózsa et al., 2000).

Since infestation indices are not specific to hosts or parasites but reflect relationships for host–parasite species pairs, phylogenetic control for comparative analyses was not applied. Instead, ordination methods were used to explore the correlation structure among variables and to evaluate the distances between species based on these variables. They were measured at different scales (nominal, interval and ratio). Therefore, the d-correlation approach (Podani et al., 2023) was used to calculate correlations and subsequent principal component analysis of variables, and Gower's dissimilarity (Gower, 1971) and subsequent principal coordinates analysis of species and subspecies. Computations were made by programs DCORR and SYN-TAX 2000 (available from http://podani.web.elte.hu/SYN2000.html).

Results

A total of 579 individual hummingbirds were examined. They represented 49 species, of which 3 were divided into 2–3 subspecies, resulting in a total of 53 separate host taxa to be included in the multivariate analysis. Only 59 (10.2%) individual birds and 20 (40.8%) species of birds were parasitized when considering only adult and nymphal stages of lice. When hosts with louse eggs and nits (indicating past infestations) were also included in the parasitized category, 80 (13.8%) birds of 22 (44.9%) species were infested.

Neither louse nor louse eggs or nits were found on 27 species of hummingbirds. As expected, the number of host individuals correlated positively with the number of louse species (Spearman rank correlation coefficient ρ = 0.52, P = 0.0001). Thus, small sample size probably accounted for the absence of lice on certain host taxa. Small sample sizes significantly increase randomness in prevalence and abundance data; however, they do not systematically bias these estimates (Reiczigel and Rózsa, 2017). Therefore, small samples were not excluded from the multivariate analysis. A total of 267 lice representing 4 genera were collected, with a total mean intensity of 4.6 and mean abundance of 0.5. For further details, see Table 1 and Additional file 1: Tables S2–S4. For the same reason, data regarding the age of the hummingbirds examined were not included (Additional file 1: Table S5).

Table 1.

Infestation indices of lice collected from hummingbirds in the present study

CountryExamined birds (number of species)Infested birds (adults or nymphs) (number of species)Infested birds (adults or nymphs or eggs) (number of species)Number of lice (adults or nymphs)Prevalence (adults or nymphs) (%)Prevalence (adults or nymphs or eggs) (%)Mean intensity (adults or nymphs)Mean abundance (adults or nymphs)
Brazil4 (2)0000000
Costa Rica428 (32)42 (15)56 (16)1649.813.14.00.4
Honduras87 (9)11 (3)15 (5)5412.617.25.00.6
Paraguay13 (4)000000.00
Peru47 (10)6 (4)9 (4)4912.819.18.21.0
Total579 (49)59 (20)80 (22)26710.213.84.60.5

The proportion of individuals belonging to each genus, Trochiloecetes 81.6%, Trochiliphagus 15.4%, Myrsidea 2.6% and Leremenopon 0.4% (n = 267).

A total of 29 louse associations for 20 species of hummingbird were documented and evaluated (Table 2). On 13 species, only 1 genus of lice was recorded. On 5 species, Trochiloecetes and Trochiliphagus; on 1 species, Trochiloecetes and Myrsidea; on 1 species, Trochiloecetes and Leremenopon were recorded. The co-occurrence of Trochiloecetes and Trochiliphagus was detected only on 1 individual of Selasphorus flammula from Costa Rica (Table 2). Myrsidea and Leremenopon were excluded from all further analyses due to their rarity.

Table 2.

List of hummingbirds and lice recorded from them by the authors in Costa Rica, Honduras and Peru. P, number of birds parasitized; E, number of birds examined. For explanation of abbreviations of locations, see Additional file 1: Table S1

Host group and (sub)speciesPELouse genusFemalesMalesNymphsLocationElevation
Hermits (Phaethornithinae)
Phaethornis atrimentalis atrimentalis Lawrence, 1858a24Trochiloecetesb2Pe_TR779
Phaethornis longirostris baroni Hartert, EJO, 189715Trochiloecetesb454Pe_TR779
<< ″ ″ ″ >>0+1c5Pe_IQ128
Phaethornis longirostris cephalus (Bourcier and Mulsant, 1848)027CR_HC141
<< ″ ″ ″ >>011CR_B520
Phaethornis longirostris longirostris (Delattre, 1843)127Myrsideab16Ho_LA256
<< ″ ″ ″ >>827Trochiloecetesb2028Ho_LA256
Phaethornis striigularis saturatus Ridgway, 1910a1+1c2Trochiliphagusb1CR_RV934
<< ″ ″ ″ >>09CR_HC141
<< ″ ″ ″ >>02CR_T1333
<< ″ ″ ″ >>02Ho_LA256
Threnetes leucurus cervinicauda Gould, 185513Trochiloecetes741Pe_TR779
Threnetes ruckeri ventosus Bangs and Penard, TE, 1924a2+1c17Trochiloecetesb403CR_B520
<< ″ ″ ″ >>112Trochiloecetes002CR_HC141
<< ″ ″ ″ >>11Trochiloecetes612Ho_LA256
Mangoes (Polythminae)
Anthracothorax prevostii gracilirostris Ridgway, 19100+1c1Ho_LA256
Brilliants (Lesbiinae – Coeligenini)
Heliodoxa jacula henryi Lawrence, 1867a110Trochiliphagusb1CR_T1333
Mtn. Gems (Trochilinae – Lampornini)
Eugenes spectabilis (Lawrence, 1867)2+2c25Trochiliphagusb21CR_CM2987
<< ″ ″ ″ >>125Trochiloecetesb1CR_CM2987
<< ″ ″ ″ >>01CR_BV2229
Lampornis calolaemus calolaemus (Salvin, 1865)a4+3c28Trochiloecetesb652CR_BV2229
<< ″ ″ ″ >>01CR_T1333
Lampornis cinereicauda (Lawrence, 1867)a25Trochiloecetesb64CR_CM2987
Lampornis hemileucus (Salvin, 1865)a18Trochiliphagusb1CR_T1333
Panterpe insignis insignis Cabanis and Heine, 1860a4+1c41Trochiloecetesb1492CR_CM2987
<< ″ ″ ″ >>01CR_BV2229
Bees (Trochilinae – Mellisugini)
Selasphorus flammula simoni Carriker, 19102+1c, d13Trochiliphagus643CR_BV2229
<< ″ ″ ″ >>6d13Trochiloecetes64CR_BV2229
Selasphorus flammula torridus Salvin, 18701+1c10Trochiliphagus23CR_CM2987
<< ″ ″ ″ >>310Trochiloecetes113CR_CM2987
Emeralds (Trochilinae – Cynanthini)
Amazilia tzacatl tzacatl (de la Llave, 1833)0+2c33Ho_LA256
<< ″ ″ ″ >>04CR_B520
<< ″ ″ ″ >>0+1c9CR_HC141
<< ″ ″ ″ >>0+1c4CR_LT1413
Campylopterus hemileucurus mellitus Bangs, 1902135Trochiloecetesb14712CR_T1333
<< ″ ″ ″ >>05CR_LT1413
<< ″ ″ ″ >>03CR_BV2229
Cynanthus canivetii salvini (Cabanis and Heine, 1860)a13Trochiliphagusb1CR_RV934
<< ″ ″ ″ >>04Ho_UT4
Elliotomyia chionogaster chionogaster (Tschudi, 1846)a1+2c19Trochiliphagusb2Pe_HU2365
<< ″ ″ ″ >>119Trochiloecetesb596Pe_HU2365
Eupherusa eximia egregia Sclater, PL and Salvin, 1868a1+1c6Trochiliphagusb1CR_RV934
<< ″ ″ ″ >>16Trochiloecetesb23CR_RV934
<< ″ ″ ″ >>11Trochiloecetes11CR_T1333
<< ″ ″ ″ >>0+1c1CR_BV2229
Eupherusa nigriventris Lawrence, 1868a25Trochiliphagusb113CR_T1333
<< ″ ″ ″ >>15Trochiloecetesb11CR_T1333
Chalybura urochrysia melanorrhoa Salvin, 1865a17Leremenoponb100CR_B520
<< ″ ″ ″ >>213Trochiloecetesb3112CR_HC141
Chlorestes candida candida (Bourcier and Mulsant, 1846)1+1c13Trochiliphagus35Ho_LA256
Microchera cupreiceps (Lawrence, 1866)a11Trochiloecetesb1CR_RV934
Total59+21c5791166190
afirst recorded louse from this host.
bnew host-louse association
conly eggs of unidentified lice were found on the indicated number of other individuals.
done bird was parasitized by lice of both genera.

While Trochiloecetes was more prevalent than Trochiliphagus (7.6% vs 2.4%; P < 0.001), there was no significant difference between their mean intensities (5.0 vs 2.9; P = 0.11). Female-biased sex ratio and adult-biased age ratio were found for Trochiloecetes (male:female = 1:2; n = 151; χ2 = 17, P < 0.001; adults:nymphs = 1:0.4; n = 218; χ2 = 32, P < 0.001), but ratios were more equal for Trochiliphagus (male:female = 1:1.4; n = 24; χ2 = 0.66, P > 0.05; adults:nymphs = 1:0.7; n = 41; χ2 = 1.2, P > 0.05) (Additional file 1: Table S6).

Most infested birds (90%, n = 59) were parasitized with 1–10 lice. A total of 11–20 lice were found on 5 birds (Elliotomyia chionogaster, Chalybura urochrysia, Panterpe insignis, P. longirostris, Threnetes leucurus) and 1 Campylopterus hemileucurus was parasitized with 33 lice. In all cases, these birds were infested only with Trochiloecetes. Intensity of infestations with Trochiliphagus were 1–10 per infested host.

The ordination of hummingbird species is shown in Fig. 1. Similarities or differences between species as indicated by the distances among them do not correspond to the taxonomic divisions within the Trochilidae. Rather, the 2 major groups of species appear to include species of hummingbirds found at low elevation vs high elevation.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is S0031182023001294_fig1.jpg

Principal coordinates ordination of 49 species of hummingbirds for the first 2 dimensions accounting for 29.5% and 11.3% of variance, respectively. Subspecies are recognized for Phaethornis longirostris, Selasphorus flammula and Thalurania colombica, resulting in a total of 53 host taxa that were included in the analysis: AmaAma, Amazilis amazilia; AmaRut, Amazilia rutila; AmaTza, Amazilia tzacatl; AntPre, Anthracothorax prevostii; CamHem, Campylopterus hemileucurus; ChaUro, Chalybura urochrysia; ChiFim, Chionomesa fimbriata; ChiLac, Chionomesa lactea; ChlCan, Chlorestes candida; ChlEli, Chlorestes eliciae; ChlLuc, Chlorostilbon lucidus; ColCya, Colibri cyanotus; CynCan, Cynanthus canivetii; DorJoh, Doryfera johannae; DorLud, Doryfera ludovicae; EllChi, Elliotomyia chionogaster; EugSpe, Eugenes spectabilis; EupExi, Eupherusa eximia; EupNig, Eupherusa nigriventris; EutAqu, Eutoxeres aquila; GlaAen, Glaucis aeneus; GlaHir, Glaucis hirsutus; HelBar, Heliothryx barroti; HelCon, Heliomaster constantii; HelJac, Heliodoxa jacula; HylChr, Hylocharis chrysura; KlaGui, Klais guimeti; LamCal, Lampornis calolaemus; LamCin, Lampornis cinereicauda; LamHem, Lampornis hemileucus; MicCup, Microchera cupreiceps; MicChi, Microchera chionura; PanIns, Panterpe insignis; PhaAtr, Phaethornis atrimentalis; PhaCuv, Phaeochroa cuvierii; PhaEur, Phaethornis eurynome; PhaGuy, Phaethornis guy; PhaLBar, Phaethornis longirostris baroni; PhaLCep, Phaethornis longirostris cephalus; PhaLon, Phaethornis longirostris longirostris; PhaPre, Phaethornis pretrei; PhaStr, Phaethornis striigularis; PolAma, Polyerata amabilis; SauEdw, Saucerottia edward; SauHof, Saucerottia hoffmanni; SelaFSim, Selasphorus flammula simoni; SelaFTor, Selasphorus flammula torridus; SteLod, Stephanoxis loddigesii; ThaCTow, Thalurania colombica townsendi; ThaCVer, Thalurania colombica venusta; ThaFur, Thalurania furcata; ThrLeu, Threnetes leucurus; ThrRuc, Threnetes ruckeri.

Principal components ordination of climatic and host traits together with the infestation indices is shown in Fig. 2, the first 2 dimensions explaining 30 and 15% of variance, respectively. Based on this and the matrix of d-correlations (Additional file 1: Table S8) the following points can be observed:

  1. Sexual dimorphism in colouration and body mass, and behavioural dominance over rival species are close to the origin, indicating little, if any, covariation with other variables. The highest correlation for mass dimorphism is with mean elevation (r = 0.222), whereas all correlations for colouration dimorphism remain r ≤ 0.074. Behavioural dominance exhibits weak correlations with the 2 migration indices (r = 0.127, and 0.132).
  2. On Axis 1, mean body mass (also relatively close to the origin) represents a contrast with all 4 prevalence indices (r = −0.2861, −0.2628, −0.2658 and −0.1866). The same is true for the mean abundance of Trochiliphagus (r = −0.2808). These results indicate relatively weak negative covariations.
  3. Axis 2 is dominated by a dichotomy between mean elevation and climatic indices, the mean, and the predictability of temperature and precipitation. The high negative correlation between elevation and temperature (r = −0.5451) is an expected observation.
  4. The 2 indices for migration behaviour are very close to each other (r = 0.962). Both are located close to the infestation indices, suggesting some positive interaction between them, the correlations ranging from 0.234 to 0.323.
  5. Considering the 2 different prevalence indices (without or with eggs also considered) for all lice (pooled), they are very close (r = 0.959). This means that the information carried by these 2 indices is roughly similar.
  6. The infestation indices (2 types of prevalence and abundance) referring to all lice (pooled) are positioned close to the prevalence and abundance of Trochiloecetes (correlations ranging from 0.615 to 0.958 for prevalence and 0.51 to 0.565 for abundance), but more distant from Trochiliphagus infestation indices. This simply means that the former genus was more commonly collected than the latter.
  7. Prevalence and abundance of Trochiliphagus are close to mean elevation, reflecting a positive correlation between them (r = 0.3294 and 0.4202).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is S0031182023001294_fig2.jpg

Principal component analysis of variables; climatic and host traits, and infestation indices on the first 2 dimensions explaining 30% and 15% of variance, respectively. Following variables are included: (A) hummingbirds' characteristics: A migrant – migrant behaviour, B migrant – type of migration, Behav_dom, behavioural dominance; Colour_dim, sexual dichromatism; Mass_dim, sexual size dimorphism; Mean_mass, mean body mass; (B) characteristics of geographic areas: MeanAlt, mean elevation; Prec_mean, mean precipitation; Prec_Pred, predictability of precipitation; Temp_mean, mean temperature; Temp_Pred, predictability of temperature; (C) infestation indices: AllLiceEggP, prevalence of lice and louse eggs or nits; AllLicePrev, prevalence of lice; AllMeanAbun, mean abundance of lice; ToeMeanAbun, mean abundance of Trochiloecetes lice; Toe_Prev, prevalence of Trochiloecetes lice; TphMeanAbun, mean abundance of Trochiliphagus lice; Tph_Prev, prevalence of Trochiliphagus lice.

The correlation matrix is provided in Additional file 1: Table S8.

Discussion

There are 4 described species of Leremenopon from 7 species of hummingbirds (Dalgleish and Price, 2003a). Recently, Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) mentioned the occurrence of eggs of Leremenopon from 74 other species and subspecies of hummingbirds. The present record from C. urochrysia is a new host record for Leremenopon and also the first case of any identified louse from C. urochrysia.

There are 3 species of Myrsidea described from 3 species of hummingbirds (Dalgleish and Price, 2003b). In addition, unidentified specimens of Myrsidea from 6 other species of hummingbird have been mentioned (Dalgleish and Price, 2003b; Silva, 2013; Soto-Patiño et al., 2018). The present observation from P. longirostris is a new host record for this genus.

There are 13 described species of Trochiliphagus from 14 species of hummingbirds (Price et al., 2003). Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) mentioned the occurrence of Trochiliphagus eggs or nits from 174 other species or subspecies of hummingbirds, including all 10 species infested by Trochiliphagus in the present study (Table 2). These records represent the first cases of any identified louse from Cynanthus canivetii, Eupherusa eximia, E. nigriventris, E. chionogaster, Heliodoxa jacula, Lampornis hemileucus and P. striigularis. Generally, Trochiliphagus infestations are rarely found. Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) found no eggs on large samples of Metallura tyrianthina, Lesbia victoriae, Aglaeactis cupripennis and Coeligena torquata (n = 687, 408, 344, 316, respectively). Despite large sample size, Trochiliphagus was not found on Campylopterus hemileucurus (n = 43 in the present, and 276 in their study).

There are 30 described species of Trochiloecetes from 29 species of hummingbirds (Price et al., 2003). Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) reported the occurrence of eggs from another 223 species of hummingbirds, including the 15 species infested with Trochiloecetes in the present study (Table 2). These are the first cases of any identified louse from C. urochrysia, E. eximia, E. nigriventris, E. chionogaster, P. insignis, Lampornis calolaemus, L. cinereicauda, Microchera cupreiceps, Phaethornis atrimentalis and Threnetes ruckeri.

There are no records of lice infesting some species of hummingbirds, even where large sample sizes have been examined. For example, Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) found no louse eggs on large samples of Colibri coruscans, C. thalassinus, and C. delphinae (n = 769, 370, 250, respectively). On the other hand, Trochiloecetes latitemporalis was described from C. coruscans (Carriker, 1960), although this was based on 1 individual. Similarly to Oniki-Willis et al. (2023), no louse or louse eggs were found on C. cyanotus, Doryfera johannae and D. ludovicae in the present study. Formerly, 1 specimen of Trochiliphagus was reported from D. ludovicae (Clayton et al., 1992).

Since they applied rather different methods, data of Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) are not fully comparable to our results; however, the documented patterns are roughly similar. Overall, their estimates of prevalence are strongly correlated with the present estimates, after excluding samples with n < 10 (Fig. 3, Additional file 1: Table S7). Given that the former authors used a very different approach (much larger sample sizes, but unknown collection sites and dates, detecting eggs only, etc.), repeatability of estimates of prevalence is surprisingly good [Pearson's correlation: r(27) = 0.495, P = 0.0087].

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Trochiloecetes and Trochiliphagus prevalence estimates by Oniki-Willis et al. (2023) correlate strongly with the present estimates (samples with n < 10 were excluded) indicating a good repeatability of these estimates through space and time.

There is only 1 published record of Trochiliphagus and Trochiloecetes co-occurring on the same host individual from S. flammula (Carriker, 1903). Coincidentally, 1 co-infested individual is reported here from the same host species. This does not contradict Oniki-Willis et al. (2023), who found that in very large samples of hummingbird species, the co-occurrence of eggs on the same birds was more frequent than expected by chance. First, the co-occurrence of eggs on the museum skins does not necessarily mean that the 2 infestations were simultaneous, as they might have accumulated in different periods. Second, given the rarity of these lice, the present sample sizes per host species are too small to test whether co-infestations are either more or less frequent than expected by chance.

Most infested hummingbirds were parasitized with only 1–10 lice. One notable exception was a female of Campylopterus hemileucurus, which hosted 33 Trochiloecetes (14 females, 7 males, 12 nymphs). They are relatively large lice (1.5–2.5 mm), about the size of the human louse Pediculus humanus. Based on the weight of human lice (0.0005 g, Speare et al., 2006), the weight of the 33 Trochiloecetes specimens can be estimated at 0.2% of the host's body weight (9.5 g). Considering that these parasites are haematophagous and may also have a still unknown vector potential (Nelson, 1972), such high levels of infestation may negatively influence host condition.

We observed an unexpected positive covariation between mean elevation and the prevalence and abundance of Trochiliphagus. Since bird body mass was unrelated to elevation, this covariation is not rooted in differences in body mass at different elevations. Gustafsson et al. (2019) also reported an unusually high prevalence of lice on small passerines at high geographic elevations. They suggested that this may reflect differences in environmental factors such as ambient relative humidity, which is known to affect some louse assemblages (Bush et al., 2009). On the other hand, relative humidity had little effect on avian louse communities in the Azores (Ošlejšková et al., 2020). Since high-elevation habitats may provide more limited food resources to hummingbirds than low-elevation ones, aggressive interactions with body-to-body contacts (both within and between species) may be more frequent, providing more opportunities for horizontal transmission of lice (Johnson and Clayton, 2003) at high elevations. This may be analogous to the effect of forming mixed species feeding flocks in passerines (Gustafsson et al., 2019). Alternatively, birds' energy constraints may be stricter at higher elevations so that birds may allocate less time and energy to antiparasitic behaviours like preening.

Both indices of migratory behaviour correlated with infestation indices, indicating that migrating birds had a higher prevalence and abundance of lice. This contrasts with former reports (Literák et al., 2015; Sychra et al., 2023) where there were higher prevalences of infestation in resident or short-distance migrants than in long-distance ones among European passerines. However, migration in hummingbirds examined in our study is of a different nature, as they most often exhibit elevational migration rather than latitudinal. Similarly, elevational migrant passerines have more prevalent infections by blood parasites than resident ones (Ishtiaq and Barve, 2018). The causes of the interaction between hummingbird migration and infestation indices are not yet understood.

Host body mass negatively correlated with infestation indices. This weak relationship was most clearly expressed in the prevalence of all lice (pooled as if they constituted 1 ecological guild), whether eggs were considered as a sign of infestation or not. This was surprising because the opposite tendency usually applies to avian lice (Rothschild and Clay, 1952; Rózsa, 1997). Note that former authors (Oniki-Willis et al., 2023) found no effect of host body mass on infestations of hummingbird lice, indicating that there might be no relationship of the usual positive host mass/parasite indices in this particular host–parasite system. The reasons for this are unknown.

Former authors working with ricinid lice (Carriker, 1960; Rheinwald, 1968; Nelson, 1972) reported strongly female-biased sex ratios. This was verified in the case of Trochiloecetes in our sample. This was not the case for Trochiliphagus, in which sex ratio was less biased, probably because this genus was encountered so infrequently.

Overall, multivariate analysis using the d-correlation method, which allows evaluation of variables with different scale types, provides a useful approach to studying the ecology of louse communities. This method revealed several formerly unreported differences in the ecological characteristics and infestation measures of Trochiliphagus and Trochiloecetes. Former reports on this subject are limited to a very few papers. However, the general head and body structure of these lice indicate an analogy with the ‘ecotypes’ called ‘head lice’ and ‘body lice’ which emerged repeatedly during the evolution of ischnoceran lice (Johnson et al., 2012; Bush et al., 2016). Trochiloecetes, characterized by a large head and short oval body, occurs on the head and neck, while Trochiliphagus, characterized by a narrow, slender body, occurs on the host's body. The parallelism with ischnoceran ‘head lice’ and ‘body lice’ ecotypes indicates convergent evolution that can potentially help to explore their ecology. Factors affecting distribution and abundance of Trochiloecetes are almost unknown. However, Trochiliphagus is closely related to species of Ricinus, which infest mainly small passerines. Future studies will show whether the current knowledge of Ricinus ecology (Rheinwald, 1968; Nelson, 1972) may apply to them or not.

Supporting information

Sychra et al. supplementary material:

Sychra et al. supplementary material

Acknowledgements

We thank everyone who helped us with fieldwork, in particular Evandro Trachta e Silva from Brazil, Bernardo Calvo Rodríguez and Jorge Poveda Quirós from Costa Rica, Alberto Andrés Velásquez Castillo from Honduras, Sebastián Héctor Franco Ibarrola from Paraguay, and Jorge Manuel Cárdenas-Callirgos and Daniel Valle Basto from Peru. Special thanks go to Zuzana Dolinay, Filip Kounek, Martina Literáková, Stanislav Kolenčík and Miroslav Valan for their help in the initial period of the birth of this paper. We are also grateful to reviewers who provided helpful comments and suggestions to improve this paper.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0031182023001294

Data availability statement

Data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article (and its supplementary information files). Complete datasets are available from the corresponding authors on reasonable request.

Author's contribution

Field collection and identification of birds: MC, IL, OS. Identification of lice and summary of infestation indices: OS, vs Statistical analysis: LR, JP. First draft and visualizations: OS, LR. Final draft and reviewing: all authors.

Financial support

OS and LR were supported by the National Research, Development, and Innovation Fund of Hungary (K143622). OS was supported by the University of Veterinary Sciences Brno, Czechia (Grant number 2023ITA22). LR was also supported by the National Research, Development, and Innovation Office of Hungary (RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00006). OS, IL and MC were funded in part by the Grant Agency of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (Grant No. IAA601690901).

Competing interests

None.

Ethical standards

Fieldwork in Costa Rica was under permit issued by the Ministerio de Ambiente, Energía y Telecomunicaciones de Costa Rica (Resoluciones No 106-2004-OFAU, No 136-2009-SINAC, No 120-2010-SINAC). Fieldwork in Perú was covered by a permit from Perúvian authorities issued to Mercedes Gonzales de la Cruz (Museo de Historia Natural, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Ricardo Palma, Lima, Perú). Fieldwork in Paraguay was under permit issued by the SEAM (Secretaría del Ambiente, Paraguay) (No 118859, No 121842, No 121856). Fieldwork in Honduras was under permit issued by the Instituto Nacional de Conservación y Desarrollo Forestal, Áreas Protegidas y Vida Silvestre, Gobierno de la República de Honduras (Resolución-DE-MP-063-2014).

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