Many parasites and pathogens cause silent/covert infections in addition to the more obvious infectious disease-causing pathology. Here, we consider how assumptions concerning superinfection, protection and seasonal host birth and transmission rates affect the evolution of such covert infections as a parasite strategy. Regardless of whether there is vertical infection or effects on sterility, overt infection is always disadvantageous in relatively constant host populations unless it provides protection from superinfection. If covert infections are protective, all individuals will enter the covert stage if there is enough vertical transmission, and revert to overt infections after a ‘latent’ period (susceptible, exposed, infected epidemiology...
Trophically transmitted parasites start their development in an intermediate host, before they finis...
As is well known, the conventional wisdom that successful parasites have to become benign is not bas...
International audienceAbstract Ecological conditions may greatly affect the relative importance of v...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Ma...
1. Pathogens are known to cause horizontally transmitted overt (fully symptomatic) and vertically tr...
1) The persistence of parasites that are only seen in intermittent outbreaks has intrigued ecologist...
The traditional mechanistic trade-offs resulting in a negative correlation between transmission and ...
Parasite fitness is tightly controlled by host ecology. The timing of seasonal host activities, or h...
Abstract The timing of seasonal activity, or phenology, is an adaptive trait that maximizes individu...
International audienceIn parasites with mixed modes of transmission, ecological conditions may deter...
Infectious diseases are pervasive, producing strong evolutionary pressure on their hosts. Often epid...
Traditional epidemiological models assume that transmission increases proportionally to the density ...
International audienceParasites are known to manipulate the behavior of their hosts in ways that inc...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Conventional wisdom holds that because parasites depend on their ...
Infectivity periods of different tick-borne pathogens in host species can vary widely, and the varia...
Trophically transmitted parasites start their development in an intermediate host, before they finis...
As is well known, the conventional wisdom that successful parasites have to become benign is not bas...
International audienceAbstract Ecological conditions may greatly affect the relative importance of v...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Ma...
1. Pathogens are known to cause horizontally transmitted overt (fully symptomatic) and vertically tr...
1) The persistence of parasites that are only seen in intermittent outbreaks has intrigued ecologist...
The traditional mechanistic trade-offs resulting in a negative correlation between transmission and ...
Parasite fitness is tightly controlled by host ecology. The timing of seasonal host activities, or h...
Abstract The timing of seasonal activity, or phenology, is an adaptive trait that maximizes individu...
International audienceIn parasites with mixed modes of transmission, ecological conditions may deter...
Infectious diseases are pervasive, producing strong evolutionary pressure on their hosts. Often epid...
Traditional epidemiological models assume that transmission increases proportionally to the density ...
International audienceParasites are known to manipulate the behavior of their hosts in ways that inc...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Conventional wisdom holds that because parasites depend on their ...
Infectivity periods of different tick-borne pathogens in host species can vary widely, and the varia...
Trophically transmitted parasites start their development in an intermediate host, before they finis...
As is well known, the conventional wisdom that successful parasites have to become benign is not bas...
International audienceAbstract Ecological conditions may greatly affect the relative importance of v...