Host dispersal is now recognized as a key predictor of the landscape-level persistence and expansion of parasites. However, current theories treat post-infection dispersal propensities as a fixed trait, and the plastic nature of host’s responses to parasite infection has long been underappreciated. Here, we present a mark-recapture experiment in a single-host parasite system (larval parasites of the freshwater mussel Margaritifera laevis and its salmonid fish host Oncorhynchus masou masou) and provide the first empirical evidence that parasite infection induces size-dependent host dispersal in the field. In response to parasite infection, large fish become more dispersive, whereas small fish tend to stay at the home patch. The observed plas...
Divergent natural selection regimes can contribute to adaptive population divergence, but can be sen...
Quantifying the fitness cost that parasites impose on wild hosts is a challenging task because the e...
Non-random species associations occur in naturally-sampled parasite communities. The processes resul...
Dispersal is a central determinant of spatial dynamics in communities and ecosystems, and various ec...
Dispersal determines the spatial dynamics of host-parasite assemblages, particularly during invasion...
Eco-evolutionary processes may play an important role in the spatial spread of infectious disease. C...
International audienceInferring parameters related to the aggregation pattern of parasites and to th...
Spatial dynamics of range-shifting species can be deeply affected by biotic interactions. One ubiqui...
International audienceFor parasites, finding their hosts in vast and heterogeneous environments is a...
Although connectivity can promote host species persistence in a metapopulation, dispersal may also e...
International audienceRapid evolutionary change during range expansions can lead to diverging range ...
Native parasite acquisition provides introduced species with the potential to modify native host-par...
Spatial variation in parasitic infections is common, and has the potential to drive population diver...
Rapid evolutionary changes during range expansions can lead to the divergence between range core and...
Divergent natural selection regimes can contribute to adaptive population divergence, but can be sen...
Quantifying the fitness cost that parasites impose on wild hosts is a challenging task because the e...
Non-random species associations occur in naturally-sampled parasite communities. The processes resul...
Dispersal is a central determinant of spatial dynamics in communities and ecosystems, and various ec...
Dispersal determines the spatial dynamics of host-parasite assemblages, particularly during invasion...
Eco-evolutionary processes may play an important role in the spatial spread of infectious disease. C...
International audienceInferring parameters related to the aggregation pattern of parasites and to th...
Spatial dynamics of range-shifting species can be deeply affected by biotic interactions. One ubiqui...
International audienceFor parasites, finding their hosts in vast and heterogeneous environments is a...
Although connectivity can promote host species persistence in a metapopulation, dispersal may also e...
International audienceRapid evolutionary change during range expansions can lead to diverging range ...
Native parasite acquisition provides introduced species with the potential to modify native host-par...
Spatial variation in parasitic infections is common, and has the potential to drive population diver...
Rapid evolutionary changes during range expansions can lead to the divergence between range core and...
Divergent natural selection regimes can contribute to adaptive population divergence, but can be sen...
Quantifying the fitness cost that parasites impose on wild hosts is a challenging task because the e...
Non-random species associations occur in naturally-sampled parasite communities. The processes resul...