The amphipod Gammarus duebeni harbours several species
of vertically transmitted, feminizing microsporidian parasites.
G. duebeni were collected from 3 localities in the UK. Animals
from
Budle Bay, Northumberland, were infected with
Octosporea effeminans, and those from Millport, Isle of Cumbrae
and
Fenham Flats, Northumberland were infected with
microsporidia of the genus Nosema. We derived expected distributions
of parasites per host embryonic cell by modelling
parasite transmission as a multitype, Galton–Watson branching
process. Parasite prevalence (proportion of females
infected) was significantly heterogeneous among localities. Parasite burden
in zygotes was much higher for females infected
with Nosema than in animals infected with O. effeminans.
There was no significant difference between localities in the
number of Nosema in the zygotes. Comparison of models and data
from
64-cell host embryos showed that the distributions
of parasites per cell were consistent with the hypothesis that sorting
of
parasites into daughter cells is biased for at least
1 cell lineage. Host embryos infected with O. effeminans could
expect to contain a growing number of parasites in each
cell generation within such biased cell lineages; similar estimates for
Nosema predict a decline in the number of parasites
per cell within a biased lineage. We discuss the possibility that the
2 species of parasite may be employing different
strategies in order to ensure transmission to the next host generation.