How infectious disease agents interact with their host changes during the course of infection and can alter the expression of disease-related traits. Yet by measuring parasite life-history traits at one or few moments during infection, studies have overlooked the impact of variable parasite growth trajectories on disease evolution. Here we show that infection-age-specific estimates of host and parasite fitness components can reveal new insight into the evolution of parasites. We do so by characterizing the within-host dynamics over an entire infection period for five genotypes of the castrating bacterial parasite Pasteuria ramosa infecting the crustacean Daphnia magna. Our results reveal that genetic variation for parasite-induced gigantism...
Epidemics commonly exert parasite-mediated selection and cause declines in host population genetic d...
Virulence, the degree to which a pathogen harms its host, is an important but poorly understood aspe...
The trade-off hypothesis for the evolution of virulence predicts that parasite transmission stage pr...
How infectious disease agents interact with their host changes during the course of infection and ca...
It has been suggested that the harm parasites cause to their hosts is an unavoidable consequence of ...
The infection process of many diseases can be divided into series of steps, each one required to suc...
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...
1. Host age is one of the most striking differences among hosts within most populations, but there i...
International audienceA substantial body of theory indicates that parasites may mould the population...
Background: Ecological factors play an important role in the evolution of parasite exploitation stra...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
There are a number of ways in which a host can respond in evolutionary time to reductions in surviva...
The trade-off hypothesis for the evolution of virulence predicts that parasite transmission stage pr...
Parasites often infect genetically diverse host populations, and the evolutionary trajectories of pa...
Epidemics commonly exert parasite-mediated selection and cause declines in host population genetic d...
Virulence, the degree to which a pathogen harms its host, is an important but poorly understood aspe...
The trade-off hypothesis for the evolution of virulence predicts that parasite transmission stage pr...
How infectious disease agents interact with their host changes during the course of infection and ca...
It has been suggested that the harm parasites cause to their hosts is an unavoidable consequence of ...
The infection process of many diseases can be divided into series of steps, each one required to suc...
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...
1. Host age is one of the most striking differences among hosts within most populations, but there i...
International audienceA substantial body of theory indicates that parasites may mould the population...
Background: Ecological factors play an important role in the evolution of parasite exploitation stra...
By combining a field study with controlled laboratory experimentation, we examined how infection tra...
There are a number of ways in which a host can respond in evolutionary time to reductions in surviva...
The trade-off hypothesis for the evolution of virulence predicts that parasite transmission stage pr...
Parasites often infect genetically diverse host populations, and the evolutionary trajectories of pa...
Epidemics commonly exert parasite-mediated selection and cause declines in host population genetic d...
Virulence, the degree to which a pathogen harms its host, is an important but poorly understood aspe...
The trade-off hypothesis for the evolution of virulence predicts that parasite transmission stage pr...