Parasite epidemics may be influenced by interactions among symbionts, which can depend on past events at multiple spatial scales. Within host individuals, interactions can depend on the sequence in which symbionts infect a host, generating priority effects. Across host individuals, interactions can depend on parasite phenology. To test the roles of parasite interactions and phenology in epidemics, we embedded multiple cohorts of sentinel plants, grown from seeds with and without a vertically transmitted symbiont, into a wild host population, and tracked foliar infections caused by three common fungal parasites. Within hosts, parasite growth was influenced by coinfections, but coinfections were often prevented by priority effects among symbi...
1.The size of disease epidemics remains difficult to predict, especially when parasites interact wit...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
Host–parasite interactions are subject to strong trait-mediated indirect effects from other species....
Parasite epidemics may be influenced by interactions among symbionts, which can depend on past event...
Organisms are frequently coinfected by multiple parasite strains and species, and interactions betwe...
Parasite epidemics can depend on priority effects, and parasite priority effects can result from the...
1. The relative importance of bottom-up versus top-down control of population dynamics has been the ...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
Diverse parasite taxa share hosts both at the population level and within individual hosts and their...
Interactions among parasite species coinfecting the same host individual can have far reaching conse...
The causes and consequences of aggregation among conspecifics have received much attention. For infe...
Infections of one host by multiple parasites are common, and several studies have found that the ord...
Coinfection of host populations alters pathogen prevalence, host mortality, and pathogen evolution. ...
1) Co-infections by multiple parasites are common in natural populations. Some of these are likely t...
Host individuals are often coinfected with diverse parasite assemblages, resulting in complex intera...
1.The size of disease epidemics remains difficult to predict, especially when parasites interact wit...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
Host–parasite interactions are subject to strong trait-mediated indirect effects from other species....
Parasite epidemics may be influenced by interactions among symbionts, which can depend on past event...
Organisms are frequently coinfected by multiple parasite strains and species, and interactions betwe...
Parasite epidemics can depend on priority effects, and parasite priority effects can result from the...
1. The relative importance of bottom-up versus top-down control of population dynamics has been the ...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
Diverse parasite taxa share hosts both at the population level and within individual hosts and their...
Interactions among parasite species coinfecting the same host individual can have far reaching conse...
The causes and consequences of aggregation among conspecifics have received much attention. For infe...
Infections of one host by multiple parasites are common, and several studies have found that the ord...
Coinfection of host populations alters pathogen prevalence, host mortality, and pathogen evolution. ...
1) Co-infections by multiple parasites are common in natural populations. Some of these are likely t...
Host individuals are often coinfected with diverse parasite assemblages, resulting in complex intera...
1.The size of disease epidemics remains difficult to predict, especially when parasites interact wit...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
Host–parasite interactions are subject to strong trait-mediated indirect effects from other species....