Abstract

Genetically specific interactions between hosts and parasites can lead to coevolutionary fluctuations in their genotype frequencies over time. Such fluctuating selection dynamics are, however, expected to occur only under specific circumstances (e.g., high fitness costs of infection to the hosts). The outcomes of host–parasite interactions are typically affected by environmental/ecological factors, which could modify coevolutionary dynamics. For instance, individual hosts are often infected with more than one parasite species and interactions between them can alter host and parasite performance. We examined the potential effects of coinfections by genetically specific (i.e., coevolving) and nonspecific (i.e., generalist) parasite species on fluctuating selection dynamics using numerical simulations. We modeled coevolution (a) when hosts are exposed to a single parasite species that must genetically match the host to infect, (b) when hosts are also exposed to a generalist parasite that increases fitness costs to the hosts, and (c) when coinfecting parasites compete for the shared host resources. Our results show that coinfections can enhance fluctuating selection dynamics when they increase fitness costs to the hosts. Under resource competition, coinfections can either enhance or suppress fluctuating selection dynamics, depending on the characteristics (i.e., fecundity, fitness costs induced to the hosts) of the interacting parasites.

Highlights

  • Hosts and parasites are expected to coevolve antagonistically

  • We modeled coevolution (a) when hosts are exposed to a single parasite species that must genetically match the host to infect, (b) when hosts are exposed to a generalist parasite that increases fitness costs to the hosts, and (c) when coinfecting parasites compete for the shared host resources

  • We modeled host population dynamics and parasite epidemiology under three different scenarios: (a) when hosts coevolve with a single parasite species that must genetically match the host to infect, (b) when hosts are exposed to a genetically nonspecific parasite species that increases fitness costs to the hosts in coinfections, and (c) when coinfecting parasites compete for the shared host resources

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Summary

Introduction

Hosts and parasites are expected to coevolve antagonistically (reviewed in Lively, 2001; Thompson, 1994). When the parasites used different host resources, increasing the fitness costs of infection to the hosts (scenario 1), coinfections enhanced fluctuating selection dynamics (Figure 4).

Results
Conclusion
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