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Review
. 2022 Apr;149(4):534-541.
doi: 10.1017/S0031182021002122. Epub 2021 Dec 13.

Host specificity and the reproductive strategies of parasites

Affiliations
Review

Host specificity and the reproductive strategies of parasites

Jean-François Doherty et al. Parasitology. 2022 Apr.

Abstract

Environmental stability can have profound impacts on life history trait evolution in organisms, especially with respect to development and reproduction. In theory, free-living species, when subjected to relatively stable and predictable conditions over many generations, should evolve narrow niche breadths and become more specialized. In parasitic organisms, this level of specialization is reflected by their host specificity. Here, we tested how host specificity impacts the reproductive strategies of parasites, a subject seldomly addressed for this group. Through an extensive review of the literature, we collated a worldwide dataset to predict, through Bayesian multilevel modelling, the effect of host specificity on the reproductive strategies of parasitic copepods of fishes or corals. We found that copepods of fishes with low host specificity (generalists) invest more into reproductive output with larger clutch sizes, whereas generalist copepods of corals invest less into reproductive output with smaller clutch sizes. The differences in host turnover rates through an evolutionary timescale could explain the contrasting strategies across species observed here, which should still favour the odds of parasites encountering and infecting a host. Ultimately, the differences found in this study reflect the unique evolutionary history that parasites share both intrinsically and extrinsically with their hosts.

Keywords: Host specificity; host–parasite interaction; parasitic copepod; r/K selection; reproductive strategy.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare there are no conflicts of interest.

Figures

None
Graphical abstract
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Theoretical continuum of the potential main processes influencing parasitic copepod reproductive strategies in relation to host specificity. High environmental stability promotes low turnover rates of potential hosts, likely resulting in high host specificity. These conditions should select for r-selected traits in parasites, e.g. high fecundity and lower self-maintenance. In contrast, low environmental stability equals high turnover rates of potential hosts, which could select for parasites with low host specificity. These conditions should select for K-selected traits in parasites, e.g. low fecundity and higher self-maintenance.
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Interspecific relationship (blue line with 95% credible intervals; shaded area) between host specificity and egg size for (a) fish-infecting copepods and (b) coral-infecting copepods and between host specificity and clutch size for (c) fish-infecting copepods and (d) coral-infecting copepods. An asterisk indicates the best possible model was selected using stacking and pseudo-BMA weights.

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