Into the danger zone: How the within‐host distribution of parasites controls virulence

Author:

Johnson Pieter T. J.1ORCID,Stewart Merrill Tara12ORCID,Calhoun Dana M.1ORCID,McDevitt‐Galles Travis13ORCID,Hobart Brendan1

Affiliation:

1. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado Boulder Colorado USA

2. Coastal and Marine Laboratory Florida State University St. Teresa Florida USA

3. USGS National Wildlife Health Center Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractDespite the importance of virulence in epidemiological theory, the relative contributions of host and parasite to virulence outcomes remain poorly understood. Here, we use reciprocal cross experiments to disentangle the influence of host and parasite on core virulence components—infection and pathology—and understand dramatic differences in parasite‐induced malformations in California amphibians. Surveys across 319 populations revealed that amphibians' malformation risk was 2.7× greater in low‐elevation ponds, even while controlling for trematode infection load. Factorial experiments revealed that parasites from low‐elevation sites induced higher per‐parasite pathology (reduced host survival and growth), whereas there were no effects of host source on resistance or tolerance. Parasite populations also exhibited marked differences in within‐host distribution: ~90% of low‐elevation cysts aggregated around the hind limbs, relative to <60% from high‐elevation. This offers a novel, mechanistic basis for regional variation in parasite‐induced malformations while promoting a framework for partitioning host and parasite contributions to virulence.

Funder

David and Lucile Packard Foundation

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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