The roles of environmental variation and parasite survival in virulence–transmission relationships

Author:

Turner Wendy C.1ORCID,Kamath Pauline L.2ORCID,van Heerden Henriette3ORCID,Huang Yen-Hua4ORCID,Barandongo Zoe R.4ORCID,Bruce Spencer A.5ORCID,Kausrud Kyrre6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. US Geological Survey, Wisconsin Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

2. School of Food and Agriculture, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469, USA

3. Faculty of Veterinary Science, Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa

4. Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222, USA

6. Section for Epidemiology, Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Ullevålsveien 68, 0454 Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Disease outbreaks are a consequence of interactions among the three components of a host–parasite system: the infectious agent, the host and the environment. While virulence and transmission are widely investigated, most studies of parasite life-history trade-offs are conducted with theoretical models or tractable experimental systems where transmission is standardized and the environment controlled. Yet, biotic and abiotic environmental factors can strongly affect disease dynamics, and ultimately, host–parasite coevolution. Here, we review research on how environmental context alters virulence–transmission relationships, focusing on the off-host portion of the parasite life cycle, and how variation in parasite survival affects the evolution of virulence and transmission. We review three inter-related ‘approaches’ that have dominated the study of the evolution of virulence and transmission for different host–parasite systems: (i) evolutionary trade-off theory, (ii) parasite local adaptation and (iii) parasite phylodynamics. These approaches consider the role of the environment in virulence and transmission evolution from different angles, which entail different advantages and potential biases. We suggest improvements to how to investigate virulence–transmission relationships, through conceptual and methodological developments and taking environmental context into consideration. By combining developments in life-history evolution, phylogenetics, adaptive dynamics and comparative genomics, we can improve our understanding of virulence–transmission relationships across a diversity of host–parasite systems that have eluded experimental study of parasite life history.

Funder

NSF

University of Maine

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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