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Abstract
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.
Social living has costs and benefits; here the authors use field studies, experiments and models to show that non-consumptive predation pressure in Trinidadian guppy shoals increases parasite transmission and selects for higher virulence.
Details
; Janecka, Mary J. 1
; Clark, David R. 1
; Kramp, Rachael D. 1 ; Rovenolt, Faith 1
; Patrick, Regina 1 ; Mohammed, Ryan S. 2 ; Konczal, Mateusz 3 ; Cressler, Clayton E. 4 ; Stephenson, Jessica F. 1
1 University of Pittsburgh, Department of Biological Sciences, Pittsburgh, USA (GRID:grid.21925.3d) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9000)
2 University of the West Indies, Department of Life Sciences, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago (GRID:grid.430529.9); Williams College, Biology Department, Thompson Biology Lab, Williamstown, USA (GRID:grid.268275.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2284 9898)
3 Adam Mickiewicz University, Evolutionary Biology Group, Faculty of Biology, Poznań, Poland (GRID:grid.5633.3) (ISNI:0000 0001 2097 3545)
4 University of Nebraska, School of Biological Sciences, Lincoln, USA (GRID:grid.24434.35) (ISNI:0000 0004 1937 0060)




