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1.
Evol Lett ; 7(3): 176-190, 2023 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37251584

RESUMO

Choosing to mate with an infected partner has several potential fitness costs, including disease transmission and infection-induced reductions in fecundity and parental care. By instead choosing a mate with no, or few, parasites, animals avoid these costs and may also obtain resistance genes for offspring. Within a population, then, the quality of sexually selected ornaments on which mate choice is based should correlate negatively with the number of parasites with which a host is infected ("parasite load"). However, the hundreds of tests of this prediction yield positive, negative, or no correlation between parasite load and ornament quality. Here, we use phylogenetically controlled meta-analysis of 424 correlations from 142 studies on a wide range of host and parasite taxa to evaluate explanations for this ambiguity. We found that ornament quality is weakly negatively correlated with parasite load overall, but the relationship is more strongly negative among ornaments that can dynamically change in quality, such as behavioral displays and skin pigmentation, and thus can accurately reflect current parasite load. The relationship was also more strongly negative among parasites that can transmit during sex. Thus, the direct benefit of avoiding parasite transmission may be a key driver of parasite-mediated sexual selection. No other moderators, including methodological details and whether males exhibit parental care, explained the substantial heterogeneity in our data set. We hope to stimulate research that more inclusively considers the many and varied ways in which parasites, sexual selection, and epidemiology intersect.

2.
Evolution ; 76(7): 1654-1655, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35713381

RESUMO

Sperm is not as unlimited as was once thought, placing selective pressure on sperm traits such as length and metabolism, which play key roles in sperm competition and cryptic female choice. Turnell and Reinhardt apply an imaging technique previously used for cancer and stem cell research to understand the link between sperm traits and Drosophila mating systems.


Assuntos
Preferência de Acasalamento Animal , Animais , Drosophila/genética , Feminino , Masculino , Reprodução , Sêmen , Comportamento Sexual Animal , Espermatozoides
3.
Nat Ecol Evol ; 6(7): 945-954, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35618818

RESUMO

Parasites exploit hosts to replicate and transmit, but overexploitation kills both host and parasite. Predators may shift this cost-benefit balance by consuming infected hosts or changing host behaviour, but the strength of these effects remains unclear. Here we use field and lab data on Trinidadian guppies and their Gyrodactylus spp. parasites to show how differential predation pressure influences parasite virulence and transmission. We use an experimentally demonstrated virulence-transmission trade-off to parametrize a mathematical model in which host shoaling (as a means of anti-predator defence), increases contact rates and selects for higher virulence. Then we validate model predictions by collecting parasites from wild, Trinidadian populations; parasites from high-predation populations were more virulent in common gardens than those from low-predation populations. Broadly, our results indicate that reduced social contact selects against parasite virulence.


Assuntos
Parasitos , Poecilia , Animais , Comportamento Predatório
4.
Am Nat ; 199(1): 91-107, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34978975

RESUMO

AbstractParasites can mediate competition among host species in an ecological community by differentially affecting key parameters that normally give one species a competitive edge. In nature, however, coinfecting parasites that antagonize or facilitate each other-for example, by altering cross-protective host immune responses-can modulate host infection outcomes and parasite transmission relative to a single infection. Under what conditions is coinfection likely to interfere with parasite-mediated apparent competition among hosts? To address this question, we created a model of two coinfected host species. Parasites could interact indirectly by affecting host reproduction or directly by modulating recovery and disease-induced mortality of each host species to a focal infection. We grounded our model with parameters from a classic apparent competition system but allowed for multiple parasite transmission modes and interaction scenarios. Our results suggest that infection-induced mortality has an outsized effect on competition outcomes relative to recovery but that coinfection-mediated modulation of mortality can produce a range of coexistence or competitive exclusion outcomes. Moreover, while infection prevalence is sensitive to variation in parasite transmission mode, host competitive outcomes are not. Our generalizable model highlights the influence of immunological variation and parasite ecology on community ecology.


Assuntos
Coinfecção , Parasitos , Animais , Ecologia , Especificidade de Hospedeiro , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita
5.
Evolution ; 75(2): 561-562, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33368255

RESUMO

Does a male courting behavior proximately cause polyandry in a fruit fly species? Minekawa et al. found that in Drosophila prolongata, male flies vibrate their legs to overcome female remating suppression, resulting in multiple matings for females that otherwise may have remained monandrous.


Assuntos
Drosophila , Comportamento Sexual Animal , Animais , Feminino , Masculino , Reprodução
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