This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.The harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species from negligible to a high likelihood of rapid death. Classic theory for the evolution of virulence is based on a trade-off between pathogen growth, transmission and host survival, which predicts that higher within-host growth causes increased transmission and higher virulence. However, using data from 61 human pathogens, we found the opposite correlation to the expected positive correlation between pathogen growth rate and virulence. We found that (i) slower growing pathogens are significantly more virulent than faster growing pathogens, (ii) inhale...
Invited paper for the journal Vaccine summarising a workshop at Rutgers University in July 2005 on V...
Articlehttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96988/1/UMURF-Issue06_2009-DUrcuyoJF.pd
BACKGROUND: Ecological factors play an important role in the evolution of parasite exploitation str...
The harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species fro...
This article is (c) 2007 The Royal SocietyThe trade-off hypothesis of virulence evolution rests on t...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.It...
This article reviews research on the evolutionary mechanisms leading to different transmission modes...
Publisher Copyright: © 2015 Mikonranta et al.Background: Pathogens evolve in a close antagonistic re...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
Emerging infectious diseases are often the result of a host shift, where the pathogen origi-nates fr...
The virulence--transmission trade-off hypothesis proposed more than 30 years ago is the cornerstone ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData archiv...
Evolutionary virulence theory is life history theory for pathogens that explains why pathogen-induce...
1. Understanding pathogen transmission is crucial for predicting and managing disease. Nonetheless, ...
Virulence is expected to be linked to parasite fitness via transmission. However, it is not clear wh...
Invited paper for the journal Vaccine summarising a workshop at Rutgers University in July 2005 on V...
Articlehttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96988/1/UMURF-Issue06_2009-DUrcuyoJF.pd
BACKGROUND: Ecological factors play an important role in the evolution of parasite exploitation str...
The harm that pathogens cause to hosts during infection, termed virulence, varies across species fro...
This article is (c) 2007 The Royal SocietyThe trade-off hypothesis of virulence evolution rests on t...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.It...
This article reviews research on the evolutionary mechanisms leading to different transmission modes...
Publisher Copyright: © 2015 Mikonranta et al.Background: Pathogens evolve in a close antagonistic re...
The study of social evolution and virulence in parasites is concerned with fitness consequences of t...
Emerging infectious diseases are often the result of a host shift, where the pathogen origi-nates fr...
The virulence--transmission trade-off hypothesis proposed more than 30 years ago is the cornerstone ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData archiv...
Evolutionary virulence theory is life history theory for pathogens that explains why pathogen-induce...
1. Understanding pathogen transmission is crucial for predicting and managing disease. Nonetheless, ...
Virulence is expected to be linked to parasite fitness via transmission. However, it is not clear wh...
Invited paper for the journal Vaccine summarising a workshop at Rutgers University in July 2005 on V...
Articlehttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/96988/1/UMURF-Issue06_2009-DUrcuyoJF.pd
BACKGROUND: Ecological factors play an important role in the evolution of parasite exploitation str...