Parasite environments are heterogeneous at different levels. The first level of variability is the host itself. The second level represents the external environment for the hosts, to which parasites may be exposed during part of their life cycle. Both levels are expected to affect parasite fitness traits. We disentangle the main and interaction effects of variation in the immediate host environment, here the diatom Asterionella formosa (variables host cell volume and host condition through herbicide pre-exposure) and variation in the external environment (variables host density and acute herbicide exposure) on three fitness traits (infection success, development time and reproductive output) of a chytrid parasite. Herbicide exposure only de...
Local adaptation is a powerful mechanism to maintain genetic diversity in subdivided populations. It...
Experimental evolution can be used to test for and characterize parasite and pathogen adaptation. We...
Organisms are continually faced with the dilemma of allocating resources to competing functional dem...
Parasite environments are heterogeneous at different levels. The first level of variability is the h...
Parasite environments are heterogeneous at different levels. The first level of variability is the h...
Research in host-parasite evolutionary ecology has demonstrated that environmental variation plays a...
Parasites play an important role in the regulation of host population growth. How these ubiquitous s...
The microsporidian parasite Edhazardia aedis is capable of vertical or horizontal transmission among...
It has recently been suggested that the expression of parasite virulence depends on host population ...
Parasites achieve their fitness by reducing the fitness of the hosts they infect. The relationship b...
Evolutionary studies often estimate fitness components with the aim to make predictions about the ou...
To be classified as a parasite, a symbiont must reduce the fitness of its host (Zelmer 1998; Sorci a...
Disease outbreaks are a consequence of interactions among the three components of a host–parasite s...
Experimental evolution can be used to test for and characterize parasite and pathogen adaptation. We...
Characteristics of hosts and parasites have a genetic basis, and thus can be shaped by coevolution. ...
Local adaptation is a powerful mechanism to maintain genetic diversity in subdivided populations. It...
Experimental evolution can be used to test for and characterize parasite and pathogen adaptation. We...
Organisms are continually faced with the dilemma of allocating resources to competing functional dem...
Parasite environments are heterogeneous at different levels. The first level of variability is the h...
Parasite environments are heterogeneous at different levels. The first level of variability is the h...
Research in host-parasite evolutionary ecology has demonstrated that environmental variation plays a...
Parasites play an important role in the regulation of host population growth. How these ubiquitous s...
The microsporidian parasite Edhazardia aedis is capable of vertical or horizontal transmission among...
It has recently been suggested that the expression of parasite virulence depends on host population ...
Parasites achieve their fitness by reducing the fitness of the hosts they infect. The relationship b...
Evolutionary studies often estimate fitness components with the aim to make predictions about the ou...
To be classified as a parasite, a symbiont must reduce the fitness of its host (Zelmer 1998; Sorci a...
Disease outbreaks are a consequence of interactions among the three components of a host–parasite s...
Experimental evolution can be used to test for and characterize parasite and pathogen adaptation. We...
Characteristics of hosts and parasites have a genetic basis, and thus can be shaped by coevolution. ...
Local adaptation is a powerful mechanism to maintain genetic diversity in subdivided populations. It...
Experimental evolution can be used to test for and characterize parasite and pathogen adaptation. We...
Organisms are continually faced with the dilemma of allocating resources to competing functional dem...