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Dryad

Data from: Effects of manipulated food availability and seasonality on innate immune function in a passerine

Cite this dataset

Driessen, Merijn et al. (2022). Data from: Effects of manipulated food availability and seasonality on innate immune function in a passerine [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.jwstqjqct

Abstract

1. The innate immune system is essential for survival, yet many immune traits are highly variable between and within individuals. In recent years, attention has shifted to the role of environmental factors in modulating this variation. A key environmental factor is food availability, which plays a major role in shaping life-histories, and may affect resource allocation to immune function through its effect on nutritional state.

2. We developed a technique to permanently increase foraging costs in seed-eating birds, and leveraged this technique to study the effects of food availability on the innate immune system over a three-year period in 230 zebra finches housed in outdoor aviaries. The immune components we studied were haptoglobin, ovotransferrin, nitric oxide, natural antibodies through agglutination, complement-mediated lysis, and killing capacity of Escherichia coli and Candida albicans, covering a broad spectrum of the innate immune system. We explored effects of food availability in conjunction with other potentially important variables: season, age, sex, and manipulated natal brood size.

3. Increased foraging costs affected multiple components of the immune system, albeit in a variable way. Nitric oxide and agglutination levels were lower under harsh foraging conditions, while Escherichia coli killing capacity was increased. Agglutination levels also varied seasonally, but only at low foraging costs. C. albicans' killing capacity was lower in winter, and even more so for animals in harsh foraging conditions that were raised in large broods. Effects of food availability on ovotransferrin were also seasonal, and only apparent in males. Haptoglobin levels were independent of foraging costs and season.

4. Males had higher levels of immune function than females for 3 of the measured immune traits. Innate immune function was independent of age and manipulated natal brood size.

5. Our finding that food availability affects innate immune function suggests that fitness effects of food availability may at least partially be mediated by effects on the immune system. However, food availability effects on innate immunity varied in direction between traits, illustrating the complexity of the immune system and precluding conclusions on the level of disease resistance.

Methods

For detailed information on methods, see Driessen et al. Journal of Animal Ecology, 2022

In short, blood from zebrafinches housed under in different foraging environments was collected biannually over three years.

An array of innate immune measures was performed on the blood samples.

Usage notes

Use R to open the datafile.

Immune measures and many dependent variables were median centered and divided by the standard deviation before analysis.

Funding

University of Groningen