The literature about mutant invasion and fixation typically assumes populations to exist in isolation from their ecosystem. Yet, populations are part of ecological communities, and enemy-victim (e.g. predator-prey or pathogen-host) interactions are particularly common. We use spatially explicit, computational pathogen-host models (with wild-type and mutant hosts) to re-visit the established theory about mutant fixation, where the pathogen equally attacks both wild-type and mutant individuals. Mutant fitness is assumed to be unrelated to infection. We find that pathogen presence substantially weakens selection, increasing the fixation probability of disadvantageous mutants and decreasing it for advantageous mutants. The magnitude of the effe...
Adaptation is a common theme in both pathogen emergence, for example, in zoonotic cross-species tran...
Understanding the evolution of pathogen niche width is important for predicting disease spread and t...
International audienceThere is growing theoretical evidence that spatial structure can affect the ec...
Natural selection is usually studied between mutants that differ in reproductive rate, but are subje...
The infection of cells by multiple copies of a given virus can impact viral evolution in a variety o...
Replicators such as parasites invading a new host species, species invading a new ecological niche, ...
<div><p>Replicators such as parasites invading a new host species, species invading a new ecological...
Fixation probability, the probability that the frequency of a newly arising mutation in a population...
SummaryIndividuals tend to interact more strongly with nearby individuals or within particular socia...
Repeated extinction and recolonization events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
Populations in spatially structured environments may be divided into a number of (semi-) isolated su...
Multiple pathogenic infections can influence disease transmission and virulence, and have important ...
There is growing theoretical evidence that spatial structure can affect the ecological and evolution...
We consider an individual-based spatial model of a generic host-pathogen system and explore the diff...
Repeated extinction and recolonization events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
Adaptation is a common theme in both pathogen emergence, for example, in zoonotic cross-species tran...
Understanding the evolution of pathogen niche width is important for predicting disease spread and t...
International audienceThere is growing theoretical evidence that spatial structure can affect the ec...
Natural selection is usually studied between mutants that differ in reproductive rate, but are subje...
The infection of cells by multiple copies of a given virus can impact viral evolution in a variety o...
Replicators such as parasites invading a new host species, species invading a new ecological niche, ...
<div><p>Replicators such as parasites invading a new host species, species invading a new ecological...
Fixation probability, the probability that the frequency of a newly arising mutation in a population...
SummaryIndividuals tend to interact more strongly with nearby individuals or within particular socia...
Repeated extinction and recolonization events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
Populations in spatially structured environments may be divided into a number of (semi-) isolated su...
Multiple pathogenic infections can influence disease transmission and virulence, and have important ...
There is growing theoretical evidence that spatial structure can affect the ecological and evolution...
We consider an individual-based spatial model of a generic host-pathogen system and explore the diff...
Repeated extinction and recolonization events generate a landscape of host populations that vary in ...
Adaptation is a common theme in both pathogen emergence, for example, in zoonotic cross-species tran...
Understanding the evolution of pathogen niche width is important for predicting disease spread and t...
International audienceThere is growing theoretical evidence that spatial structure can affect the ec...