%0 Journal Article %9 ACL : Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture répertoriées par l'AERES %A Correa, A. C. %A De Meeûs, Thierry %A Dreyfuss, G. %A Rondelaud, D. %A Hurtrez-Bousses, S. %T Galba truncatula and Fasciola hepatica : genetic costructures and interactions with intermediate host dispersal %D 2017 %L fdi:010071350 %G ENG %J Infection Genetics and Evolution %@ 1567-1348 %K Fasciola hepatica ; Galba truncatula ; Omphiscola glabra ; Genetic variability ; Selfing ; Local adaptation %K FRANCE %M ISI:000414866200026 %P 186-194 %R 10.1016/j.meegid.2017.09.012 %U https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071350 %> https://www.documentation.ird.fr/intranet/publi/2017/11/010071350.pdf %V 55 %W Horizon (IRD) %X Antagonistic interactions between hosts and parasites are key structuring forces in natural populations. Demographic factors like extinction, migration and the effective population size shape host-parasite metapopulational dynamics. Therefore, to understand the evolution of host-parasite systems it is necessary to study the distribution of the genetic variation of both entities simultaneously. In this paper, we investigate the population genetics co-structure of parasites and hosts within a metapopulation of the liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, and two of its intermediate hosts, the main intermediate host in Europe, Galba truncatula, and a new intermediate host, Omphiscola glabra, in Central France. Our results reveal an absence of specificity of flukes as regard to the two alternative hosts though O. glabra shows higher prevalence of F. hepatica. Host and parasites displayed contrasting population genetics structure with very small, highly inbred (selfing) and strongly isolated G. truncatula populations and much bigger, panmictic and more dispersive F. hepatica. This could indicate a local adaptation of the parasite and a local maladaptation of the host. We also unveil a parasite-mediated biased population genetics structure suggesting that infected G. truncatula disperse more; have higher dispersal survival than uninfected snails or, more likely, that immigrant snails are infected more often than local snails (local parasites are less adapted to local hosts). Finally, an absence, or at least an ambiguous signature of isolation by distance was observed in both host and parasite population. A very weak migration rate for G. truncatula provides a reasonable explanation for this ambiguous result. Alternatively, smaller sample sizes combined with modest migration rates might explain the difficulties to unveil the signal in F. hepatica. %$ 052 ; 080