The virulence--transmission trade-off hypothesis proposed more than 30 years ago is the cornerstone in the study of host-parasite co-evolution. This hypothesis rests on the premise that virulence is an unavoidable and increasing cost because the parasite uses host resources to replicate. This cost associated with replication ultimately results in a deceleration in transmission rate because increasing within-host replication increases host mortality. Empirical tests of predictions of the hypothesis have found mixed support, which cast doubt about its overall generalizability. To quantitatively address this issue, we conducted a meta-analysis of 30 empirical studies, after reviewing over 4000 published papers, focusing on the four core rel...
Over a billion people on earth are infected with helminth parasites and show remarkable variation in...
1 Arguably the most important and elusive component of host-parasite models is the transmission func...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Conventional wisdom holds that because parasites depend on their ...
The virulence--transmission trade-off hypothesis proposed more than 30 years ago is the cornerstone ...
Climate change and anthropogenic activity are currently driving large changes in nutritional availab...
The transmission–virulence trade-off hypothesis is one of the few adaptive explanations of virulence...
The adaptive hypothesis invoked to explain why parasites harm their hosts is known as the trade-off ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Th...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
Parasite strategies of host exploitation may be affected by host defence strategies and multiple inf...
How and why parasite virulence (terms in bold font are in the Glossary) evolves are arguably some of...
Many pathogens and parasites are transmitted through hosts that differ in species, sex, genotype, or...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
What drives the evolution of parasite life history traits? Recent studies suggest that feedbacks bet...
Over a billion people on earth are infected with helminth parasites and show remarkable variation in...
1 Arguably the most important and elusive component of host-parasite models is the transmission func...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Conventional wisdom holds that because parasites depend on their ...
The virulence--transmission trade-off hypothesis proposed more than 30 years ago is the cornerstone ...
Climate change and anthropogenic activity are currently driving large changes in nutritional availab...
The transmission–virulence trade-off hypothesis is one of the few adaptive explanations of virulence...
The adaptive hypothesis invoked to explain why parasites harm their hosts is known as the trade-off ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Th...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
Parasite strategies of host exploitation may be affected by host defence strategies and multiple inf...
How and why parasite virulence (terms in bold font are in the Glossary) evolves are arguably some of...
Many pathogens and parasites are transmitted through hosts that differ in species, sex, genotype, or...
The majority of organisms host multiple parasite species, each of which can interact with hosts and ...
What drives the evolution of parasite life history traits? Recent studies suggest that feedbacks bet...
Over a billion people on earth are infected with helminth parasites and show remarkable variation in...
1 Arguably the most important and elusive component of host-parasite models is the transmission func...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Conventional wisdom holds that because parasites depend on their ...