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Sex differences in host defence interfere with parasite‐mediated selection for outcrossing during host–parasite coevolution
Authors:Leila Masri  Rebecca D Schulte  Nadine Timmermeyer  Stefanie Thanisch  Lena Luise Crummenerl  Gunther Jansen  Nico K Michiels  Hinrich Schulenburg
Abstract:The Red Queen hypothesis proposes that coevolving parasites select for outcrossing in the host. Outcrossing relies on males, which often show lower immune investment due to, for example, sexual selection. Here, we demonstrate that such sex differences in immunity interfere with parasite‐mediated selection for outcrossing. Two independent coevolution experiments with Caenorhabditis elegans and its microparasite Bacillus thuringiensis produced decreased yet stable frequencies of outcrossing male hosts. A subsequent systematic analysis verified that male C. elegans suffered from a direct selective disadvantage under parasite pressure (i.e. lower resistance, decreased sexual activity, increased escape behaviour), which can reduce outcrossing and thus male frequencies. At the same time, males offered an indirect selective benefit, because male‐mediated outcrossing increased offspring resistance, thus favouring male persistence in the evolving populations. As sex differences in immunity are widespread, such interference of opposing selective constraints is likely of central importance during host adaptation to a coevolving parasite.
Keywords:Bacillus thuringiensis  Bateman's principle  Caenorhabditis elegans  ecological immunology  host–  parasite coevolution  Red Queen hypothesis  sexual selection
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