Fitness of parasites: pathology and selection
- PMID: 9076524
- DOI: 10.1016/s0020-7519(96)00168-3
Fitness of parasites: pathology and selection
Abstract
Parasites improve their fitness as a result of the selection of traits which determine their relationships with their hosts. Some of these relationships are examined briefly. There is a cost of virulence for parasites, paralleling the cost of resistance for hosts, which implies that the good health of the host can be a component of parasite fitness; conversely, some transmission modes imply that the host be markedly weakened by the parasite. Pathogenicity can be influenced by characters such as a transmission of the parasite from parents to offspring, or the demographic characteristics of the host populations. Important components of parasite fitness are: the complexity of the life-cycle; the degree of specialization for a more or less open host range; the conspicuousness or discretion of the infective and parasitic stages. However, the best possible adaptation to a particular host is not always selected: when a parasite exploits several host species, the gene flows between parasites which have developed in different hosts may be responsible for "maladaptation". This may be important for an understanding of the pathogenicity of certain human parasitic diseases.
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