A well-known result from the theory of the evolution of virulence is the prediction that the virulence of a pathogen (i.e. the rate of parasite-induced host mortality) always evolves to higher levels when host back-ground mortality rates increase. This prediction, however, is derived from models that assume that host mortality sources combine additively to determine the overall host mortality rate. In this paper, we suggest that such additivity is probably rare for many host^pathogen systems, and explore how the predictions for the evolution of virulence are altered when interactions between host mortality sources are incorporated into the theory. Our results indicate that if mortality-source interactions are su¤ciently strong then the evol...
Parasite virulence evolution is shaped by both within-host and population-level processes yet the li...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
Mixed-genotype parasite infections are common in nature. Theoretical studies analyze the effects of ...
In recent years, population and evolutionary biologists have questioned the traditional view that pa...
Recent research is directed towards testing the idea that parasite virulence evolution is constraine...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
In recent years, population and evolutionary biologists have questioned the traditional view that pa...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
According to current evolutionary dogma, multiple infections generally increase a parasite's virulen...
International audienceVirulence is generally defined as the reduction in host fitness following infe...
This article is (c) 2007 The Royal SocietyThe trade-off hypothesis of virulence evolution rests on t...
Parasite virulence evolution is shaped by both within-host and population-level processes yet the li...
Many pathogens and parasites are transmitted through hosts that differ in species, sex, genotype, or...
Virulence is generally defined as the reduction in host fitness following infection by a para-site (...
Abstract Background Evolutionary theory suggests that the selection pressure on parasites to maximiz...
Parasite virulence evolution is shaped by both within-host and population-level processes yet the li...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
Mixed-genotype parasite infections are common in nature. Theoretical studies analyze the effects of ...
In recent years, population and evolutionary biologists have questioned the traditional view that pa...
Recent research is directed towards testing the idea that parasite virulence evolution is constraine...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
In recent years, population and evolutionary biologists have questioned the traditional view that pa...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
According to current evolutionary dogma, multiple infections generally increase a parasite's virulen...
International audienceVirulence is generally defined as the reduction in host fitness following infe...
This article is (c) 2007 The Royal SocietyThe trade-off hypothesis of virulence evolution rests on t...
Parasite virulence evolution is shaped by both within-host and population-level processes yet the li...
Many pathogens and parasites are transmitted through hosts that differ in species, sex, genotype, or...
Virulence is generally defined as the reduction in host fitness following infection by a para-site (...
Abstract Background Evolutionary theory suggests that the selection pressure on parasites to maximiz...
Parasite virulence evolution is shaped by both within-host and population-level processes yet the li...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
Mixed-genotype parasite infections are common in nature. Theoretical studies analyze the effects of ...