In recent years, population and evolutionary biologists have questioned the traditional view that parasite-mediated morbidity and mortality—virulence—is a primitive character and an artifact of recent associations between parasites and their hosts. A number of hypotheses have been proposed that favor virulence and suggest that it will be maintained by natural selection. According to some of these hypotheses, the pathogenicity of HIV, Vibrio cholerae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the Shigella, as well as Plasmodium falciparum, and many other microparasites, are not only maintained by natural selection, but their virulence increases or decreases as an evolutionary response to changes in environmental conditions or the density and/or behavior o...
The coincidental virulence evolution hypothesis suggests that outside-host selection, such as predat...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
One theory of why some pathogens are virulent (i.e., they damage their host) is that they need to ex...
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...
Why have some parasites evolved to make their hosts very sick, whereas others cause little harm? For...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
A well-known result from the theory of the evolution of virulence is the prediction that the virulen...
Abstract Background Parasites incur periodic mutations which must ultimately be eliminated to mainta...
The term virulence has a conflicting history among plant pathologists. Here we define virulence as t...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
The term virulence has a conflicting history among plant pathologists. Here we define virulence as t...
he term virulence can represent quite different things to different evol-utionary ecologists. The fo...
Abstract “Why do parasites harm their host? ” is a recurrent question in evolutionary biology and ec...
The coincidental virulence evolution hypothesis suggests that outside-host selection, such as predat...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
One theory of why some pathogens are virulent (i.e., they damage their host) is that they need to ex...
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...
Why have some parasites evolved to make their hosts very sick, whereas others cause little harm? For...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
A well-known result from the theory of the evolution of virulence is the prediction that the virulen...
Abstract Background Parasites incur periodic mutations which must ultimately be eliminated to mainta...
The term virulence has a conflicting history among plant pathologists. Here we define virulence as t...
What stops parasites becoming ever more virulent? Conventional wisdom and most parasite-centred mode...
The term virulence has a conflicting history among plant pathologists. Here we define virulence as t...
he term virulence can represent quite different things to different evol-utionary ecologists. The fo...
Abstract “Why do parasites harm their host? ” is a recurrent question in evolutionary biology and ec...
The coincidental virulence evolution hypothesis suggests that outside-host selection, such as predat...
Traditionally, evolutionary theory has attempted to predict the success of traits through their effe...
One theory of why some pathogens are virulent (i.e., they damage their host) is that they need to ex...