Parasite evolution is increasingly being recognized as one of the most important issues in applied evolutionary biology. Understanding how parasites maximize fitness whilst facing the diverse challenges of living in cells, hosts, and vectors, is central to disease control and offers a novel testing ground for evolutionary theory. The Centre for Immunity, Infection, and Evolution at the University of Edinburgh recently held a symposium to address the question "How do parasites maximise fitness across a range of biological scales?" The symposium brought together researchers whose work looks across scales and environments to understand why and how parasites 'do what they do', tying together mechanism, evolutionary explanations, and public heal...
Disease transmission is a product of mechanisms and interactions at multiple levels of biological or...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
Parasitism has evolved independently several times in many different animal lineages. Observations m...
a b s t r a c t Parasite evolution is increasingly being recognized as one of the most important iss...
In recent years there has been growing interest in applying frameworks from evolutionary ecology to ...
As a group, parasites are extraordinarily diverse. Even closely related parasites may behave very di...
In recent years there has been growing interest in applying frameworks from evolutionary ecology to ...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
The development of molecular tools has dramatically increased our knowledge of parasite diversity an...
Eukaryotic parasites (including parasitic protozoans, worms and arthropods) are more complex and het...
Beth F. Kochin is with Emory University, James J. Bull is with UT Austin, Rustom Antia is with Emory...
Abstract “Why do parasites harm their host? ” is a recurrent question in evolutionary biology and ec...
AbstractThe living world has evolved and is evolving through interspecific relationships between org...
International audiencePlasmodium, the aetiological agent of malaria, imposes a substantial public he...
Arthropoda are currently the largest metazoan phylum. Given that organisms with parasitic lifestyle ...
Disease transmission is a product of mechanisms and interactions at multiple levels of biological or...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
Parasitism has evolved independently several times in many different animal lineages. Observations m...
a b s t r a c t Parasite evolution is increasingly being recognized as one of the most important iss...
In recent years there has been growing interest in applying frameworks from evolutionary ecology to ...
As a group, parasites are extraordinarily diverse. Even closely related parasites may behave very di...
In recent years there has been growing interest in applying frameworks from evolutionary ecology to ...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
The development of molecular tools has dramatically increased our knowledge of parasite diversity an...
Eukaryotic parasites (including parasitic protozoans, worms and arthropods) are more complex and het...
Beth F. Kochin is with Emory University, James J. Bull is with UT Austin, Rustom Antia is with Emory...
Abstract “Why do parasites harm their host? ” is a recurrent question in evolutionary biology and ec...
AbstractThe living world has evolved and is evolving through interspecific relationships between org...
International audiencePlasmodium, the aetiological agent of malaria, imposes a substantial public he...
Arthropoda are currently the largest metazoan phylum. Given that organisms with parasitic lifestyle ...
Disease transmission is a product of mechanisms and interactions at multiple levels of biological or...
Abstract Parasites and hosts remain locked in a continuous struggle for survival. The co-evolutionar...
Parasitism has evolved independently several times in many different animal lineages. Observations m...