Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptation of specific life history traits. Local adaptation of resident hosts and parasites should lead to increase parasite infectivity/virulence (higher compatibility) when infecting hosts from the same location (in sympatry) than from a foreign location (in allopatry). Analysis of geographic variations in compatibility phenotypes is the most common proxy used to infer local adaptation. However, in some cases, allopatric host-parasite systems demonstrate similar or greater compatibility than in sympatry. In such cases, the potential for local adaptation remains unclear. Here, we study the interaction between Schistosoma and its vector snail Biomph...
The outcome of infection in the host snail Biomphalaria glabrata with the digenean parasite Schistos...
Invertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence non-adaptive defence s...
<div><p>The outcome of infection in the host snail <em>Biomphalaria glabrata</em> with the digenean ...
Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptati...
Schistosomiasis, a neglected global pandemic, may be curtailed by blocking transmission of the paras...
This review reexamines the results obtained in recent decades regarding the compatibility polymorphi...
International audienceInvertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence ...
In recent decades, numerous studies have sought to better understand the mechanisms underlying the c...
Parasites with complex life cycles must adapt to the genetic and phenotypic variability of their hos...
Invertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence non-adaptive defence s...
Sympatric snail populations have been kept in the laboratory since the isolation of the parasite fro...
Biomphalaria glabrata is tropical fresh water snail, living in Latin America. This planorbe is the i...
Host-parasite interaction can result in a strong alteration of the host-associated microbiota. This ...
© 2012 Lockyer et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Schistosomiasis is one of the most detrimental neglected tropical diseases. Controlling the spread o...
The outcome of infection in the host snail Biomphalaria glabrata with the digenean parasite Schistos...
Invertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence non-adaptive defence s...
<div><p>The outcome of infection in the host snail <em>Biomphalaria glabrata</em> with the digenean ...
Selective pressures between hosts and their parasites can result in reciprocal evolution or adaptati...
Schistosomiasis, a neglected global pandemic, may be curtailed by blocking transmission of the paras...
This review reexamines the results obtained in recent decades regarding the compatibility polymorphi...
International audienceInvertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence ...
In recent decades, numerous studies have sought to better understand the mechanisms underlying the c...
Parasites with complex life cycles must adapt to the genetic and phenotypic variability of their hos...
Invertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence non-adaptive defence s...
Sympatric snail populations have been kept in the laboratory since the isolation of the parasite fro...
Biomphalaria glabrata is tropical fresh water snail, living in Latin America. This planorbe is the i...
Host-parasite interaction can result in a strong alteration of the host-associated microbiota. This ...
© 2012 Lockyer et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Schistosomiasis is one of the most detrimental neglected tropical diseases. Controlling the spread o...
The outcome of infection in the host snail Biomphalaria glabrata with the digenean parasite Schistos...
Invertebrates were long thought to possess only a simple, effective and hence non-adaptive defence s...
<div><p>The outcome of infection in the host snail <em>Biomphalaria glabrata</em> with the digenean ...