Abstract

Classical models of parasite competition show that coexistence is impossible if different strains give complete cross-immunity. However, parasite coexistence is possible if some of the model assumptions are changed. For instance, coexistence is impossible if density-dependence operates only in hosts' fertility, but surprisingly becomes possible if hosts' mortaility is density-dependent. Parasite strains can also coexist if a host already infected with one strain may become infected by another strain (superinfection). I examine here if these reasons for coexistence carry over to evolutionary timescales: in other words, suppose that potentially a continuum of parasite strains may arise by mutations; will evolution arrive at a halt? in that case, will only one or several strains persist? The paradigm and methods of adaptive dynamics are used in this study. It is found, under reasonably general assumptions, that a unique evolutionarily stable state for virulence, α *, exist for both models. However, the pattern of the invasibility plots depends on the shape of the trade-off (between virulence and transmissibility, or superinfection rates) functions, and on the host demography. In many cases, the state α * is evolutionarily stable only with respect to small mutations, not to larger ones; hence, evolutionary dynamics will bring virulence to α * only if mutations are sufficiently small; for larger mutations, evolutionary dynamics are more complex and still mainly unresolved.

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