Host manipulation by sexually transmitted parasites which increases host mating rate and thus parasite transmission rate has long been viewed as a plausible parasite adaptation. However, empirical evidence for it is rare. Here, using an adaptive dynamics approach to evolution, we explore conditions under which such disease-induced mating enhancement is (or is not) likely to occur. We find that increased mating success is less likely to evolve if the host reproduction rate, or the baseline disease transmission rate, is reduced, and the parasite affects just one sex, compared to when it affects both. We also find that it is less likely to evolve if the virulence-transmission trade-off curve is stronger, since we assume that enhanced disease t...
Why do natural populations vary in the frequency of sexual reproduction? Virulent parasites may help...
Sexual selection, an integral part of evolution, accounts for the costly sexual signals that pose as...
The evolutionary consequences of changes in the complex life cycles of parasites are not limited to ...
Host manipulation by sexually transmitted parasites which increases host mating rate and thus parasi...
Determining the effects of parasites on host reproduction is key to understanding how parasites affe...
While there is an extensive literature on the evolution of mating systems in animals, little conside...
Host-parasite coevolution has been studied extensively in the context of the evolution of sex. Altho...
© 2015, Society for the Study of Evolution. The evolutionary consequences of changes in the complex ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from National Academy of Scie...
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) have been shown to increase the Costs Of multiple mating and th...
Although there is growing evidence that males tend to suffer higher levels of parasitism than female...
<div><p>Parasites can impose strong selection on hosts. In response, some host populations have adap...
Maternally inherited symbionts such as Wolbachia have long been seen mainly as reproductive parasite...
International audienceHeterogenity between sexes in terms of both the level and the type of immune r...
Sex and recombination remain one of the biggest riddles of evolutionary biology. One of the most pro...
Why do natural populations vary in the frequency of sexual reproduction? Virulent parasites may help...
Sexual selection, an integral part of evolution, accounts for the costly sexual signals that pose as...
The evolutionary consequences of changes in the complex life cycles of parasites are not limited to ...
Host manipulation by sexually transmitted parasites which increases host mating rate and thus parasi...
Determining the effects of parasites on host reproduction is key to understanding how parasites affe...
While there is an extensive literature on the evolution of mating systems in animals, little conside...
Host-parasite coevolution has been studied extensively in the context of the evolution of sex. Altho...
© 2015, Society for the Study of Evolution. The evolutionary consequences of changes in the complex ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from National Academy of Scie...
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) have been shown to increase the Costs Of multiple mating and th...
Although there is growing evidence that males tend to suffer higher levels of parasitism than female...
<div><p>Parasites can impose strong selection on hosts. In response, some host populations have adap...
Maternally inherited symbionts such as Wolbachia have long been seen mainly as reproductive parasite...
International audienceHeterogenity between sexes in terms of both the level and the type of immune r...
Sex and recombination remain one of the biggest riddles of evolutionary biology. One of the most pro...
Why do natural populations vary in the frequency of sexual reproduction? Virulent parasites may help...
Sexual selection, an integral part of evolution, accounts for the costly sexual signals that pose as...
The evolutionary consequences of changes in the complex life cycles of parasites are not limited to ...