Limited host availability disrupts the genetic correlation between virulence and transmission

Archive ouverte

Godinho, Diogo, P | Rodrigues, Leonor, R | Lefevre, Sophie | Delteil, Laurane | Mira, André, F | Fragata, Inês, R | Magalhães, Sara | Duncan, Alison, B

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley Open Access ; Oxford University Press -

International audience. Virulence is expected to be linked to parasite fitness via transmission. However, it is not clear whether this relationship is genetically determined, nor if it differs when transmission occurs continuously during, or only at the end of, the infection period. Here, we used inbred lines of the macro-parasitic spider mite Tetranychus urticae to disentangle genetic vs non-genetic correlations among traits, while varying parasite density and opportunities for transmission. A positive genetic correlation between virulence and the number of transmitting stages produced was found under continuous transmission. However, if transmission occurred only at the end of the infection period, this genetic correlation disappeared. Instead, we observed a negative relationship between virulence and the number of transmitting stages, driven by density dependence. Thus, within-host density dependence caused by reduced opportunities for transmission may hamper selection for higher virulence, providing a novel explanation as to why limited host availability leads to lower virulence.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Coinfection accelerates transmission to new hosts despite no effects on virulence and parasite growth

Archive ouverte | Godinho, Diogo, P | CCSD

International audience. One of the fundamental aims of ecological, epidemiological and evolutionary studies of host–parasite interactions is to unravel which factors affect parasite virulence. Theory predicts that v...

Wolbachia both aids and hampers the performance of spider mites on different host plants

Archive ouverte | Zélé, Flore | CCSD

International audience. In the last few decades, many studies have revealed the potential role of arthropod bacterial endosymbionts in shaping the host range of generalist herbivores and their performance on differe...

Rapid host-plant adaptation in the herbivorous spider mite Tetranychus urticae occurs at low cost

Archive ouverte | Sousa, Vitor | CCSD

International audience. The herbivorous spider mite Tetranychus urticae is a generalist world crop pest. Early evidence for host races, its fully sequenced genome resolved to the chromosome level, and the developmen...

Chargement des enrichissements...