By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection traits of the sterilizing bacterium, Pasteuria ramosa, changed over the course of a growing season in a natural population of its crustacean host Daphnia magna. The number of parasite transmission spores per infected host increased ten-fold over the course of the season, concomitant with a decline in the density of infected hosts. Plausible explanations for this variation include changes in environmental conditions, changes in host quality, or that parasite migration or natural selection caused a genetic change in the parasite population. We sought to distinguish some of these possibilities in a laboratory experiment. Thus, we preserved field-co...
According to the Red Queen hypothesis, clonal diversity in asexual populations could be maintained b...
Background: Understanding the impact of disease in natural populations requires an understanding of ...
Virulence (the harm to the host during infection) is the outcome of continuous coevolution between h...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
The population structure of parasites is central to the ecology and evolution of host-parasite syste...
International audienceA substantial body of theory indicates that parasites may mould the population...
Virulence, the degree to which a pathogen harms its host, is an important but poorly understood aspe...
Epidemics are engines for host-parasite coevolution, where parasite adaptation to hosts drives recip...
How infectious disease agents interact with their host changes during the course of infection and ca...
Knowledge of a species’ population genetic structure can provide insight into fundamental ecological...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
Epidemics commonly exert parasite-mediated selection and cause declines in host population genetic d...
Repeated extinction and recolonisation events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
A parasite's host range can have important consequences for ecological and evolutionary processes bu...
According to the Red Queen hypothesis, clonal diversity in asexual populations could be maintained b...
Background: Understanding the impact of disease in natural populations requires an understanding of ...
Virulence (the harm to the host during infection) is the outcome of continuous coevolution between h...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
The population structure of parasites is central to the ecology and evolution of host-parasite syste...
International audienceA substantial body of theory indicates that parasites may mould the population...
Virulence, the degree to which a pathogen harms its host, is an important but poorly understood aspe...
Epidemics are engines for host-parasite coevolution, where parasite adaptation to hosts drives recip...
How infectious disease agents interact with their host changes during the course of infection and ca...
Knowledge of a species’ population genetic structure can provide insight into fundamental ecological...
Parasite prevalence shows tremendous spatiotemporal variation. Theory indicates this variation might...
Epidemics commonly exert parasite-mediated selection and cause declines in host population genetic d...
Repeated extinction and recolonisation events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
A parasite's host range can have important consequences for ecological and evolutionary processes bu...
According to the Red Queen hypothesis, clonal diversity in asexual populations could be maintained b...
Background: Understanding the impact of disease in natural populations requires an understanding of ...
Virulence (the harm to the host during infection) is the outcome of continuous coevolution between h...