Abstract

In this paper, we are interested in the effect of a trophically transmitted parasite on the structure and dynamics of a resident predator–prey community. The parasite, apart from increasing the mortality rates of its hosts, can also change their physiology or their behaviour, which is known as trait-mediated indirect interaction. We assume that parasite transmission, which entails rapid physiological or behavioural change, is a fast process with respect to the community dynamics, including prey and predator growths and predation. This existence of different time scales allows us to provide analytical results to understand some conditions under which the parasite change the dynamics of the predator–prey community. Thus, we are able to find conditions under which indirect trait-mediated interactions induced by the parasite lead to a coexistence between predators and prey that would not occur in its absence. We also provide conditions, evolutionary deleterious, that ensure the extinction of a predator–prey community that would be viable without parasite intervention. Finally, we show situations in which the action of the parasite destabilizes the predator–prey system without eliminating it, producing oscillations, the mechanism of which is analysed.

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