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Sex-specific effects of a parasite evolving in a female-biased host population
Authors:David?Duneau  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:david.duneau@gmail.com"   title="  david.duneau@gmail.com"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Pepijn?Luijckx,Ludwig?F?Ruder,Dieter?Ebert
Affiliation:1.University of Basel,Zoological Institute,Basel,Switzerland;2.Department of Entomology,Cornell University,Ithaca,USA;3.University of Toronto,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,Toronto,Canada
Abstract:

Background

Males and females differ in many ways and might present different opportunities and challenges to their parasites. In the same way that parasites adapt to the most common host type, they may adapt to the characteristics of the host sex they encounter most often. To explore this hypothesis, we characterized host sex-specific effects of the parasite Pasteuria ramosa, a bacterium evolving in naturally, strongly, female-biased populations of its host Daphnia magna.

Results

We show that the parasite proliferates more successfully in female hosts than in male hosts, even though males and females are genetically identical. In addition, when exposure occurred when hosts expressed a sexual dimorphism, females were more infected. In both host sexes, the parasite causes a similar reduction in longevity and leads to some level of castration. However, only in females does parasite-induced castration result in the gigantism that increases the carrying capacity for the proliferating parasite.

Conclusions

We show that mature male and female Daphnia represent different environments and reveal one parasite-induced symptom (host castration), which leads to increased carrying capacity for parasite proliferation in female but not male hosts. We propose that parasite induced host castration is a property of parasites that evolved as an adaptation to specifically exploit female hosts.
Keywords:
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