Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Rascalou Guilhem, Gourbière S. (2014). Competition, virulence, host body mass and the diversification of macro-parasites. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 11 (93), art. 93-20131108. ISSN 1742-5689.

Titre du document
Competition, virulence, host body mass and the diversification of macro-parasites
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000332385000016
Auteurs
Rascalou Guilhem, Gourbière S.
Source
Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 2014, 11 (93), art. 93-20131108 ISSN 1742-5689
Adaptive speciation has been much debated in recent years, with a strong emphasis on how competition can lead to the diversification of ecological and sexual traits. Surprisingly, little attention has been paid to this evolutionary process to explain intrahost diversification of parasites. We expanded the theory of competitive speciation to look at the effect of key features of the parasite lifestyle, namely fragmentation, aggregation and virulence, on the conditions and rate of sympatric speciation under the standard 'pleiotropic scenario'. The conditions for competitive speciation were found similar to those for non-parasite species, but not the rate of diversification. Adaptive evolution proceeds faster in highly fragmented parasite populations and for weakly aggregated and virulent parasites. Combining these theoretical results with standard empirical allometric relationships, we showed that parasite diversification can be faster in host species of intermediate body mass. The increase in parasite load with body mass, indeed, fuels evolution by increasing mutants production, but because of the deleterious effect of virulence, it simultaneously weakens selection for resource specialization. Those two antagonistic effects lead to optimal parasite burden and host body mass for diversification. Data on the diversity of fishes' gills parasites were found consistent with the existence of such optimum.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Limnologie biologique / Océanographie biologique [034] ; Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010061635]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010061635
Contact