Abstract

Abstract We review recent advances in our understanding of the mechanisms of insect immune defence, but do so in a framework defined by the ecological and evolutionary forces that shape insect immune defence. Recent advances in genetics and molecular biology have greatly expanded our understanding of the details of the immune mechanisms that enable insects to defend themselves against parasites and pathogens. However, these studies are primarily concerned with discovering and describing how resistance mechanisms work. They rarely address the question of why they are shaped the way they are. Partly because we know so much about the mechanisms that it is now becoming possible to ask such ultimate questions about insect immunity, and they are currently emerging from the developing field of ‘ecological immunology’. In this review we first present an overview of insect immune mechanisms and their coordination before examining the key ecological/evolutionary issues associated with ecological immunity. Finally, we identify important areas for future study in insect immunity that we feel can now be approached because of the insight provided by combining mechanistic and ecological approaches.

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