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Exploitation of asymmetric predator–prey interactions by trophically transmitted parasites
Authors:Wayne Rossiter  Michael V. K. Sukhdeo
Affiliation:Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolution, 84 Lipman Drive, Bartlett Hall, Rutgers Univ., 14 College Farm Road, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA
Abstract:The directionality of asymmetric interactions between predators (definitive hosts) and prey (intermediate hosts) should impact trophic transmission in parasites. This study tests the prediction that trophically transmitted parasites are funneled towards asymmetric predator–prey interactions where intermediate hosts have few predators and definitive hosts feed upon many prey (‘downward asymmetry’). The distribution of trophically transmitted parasites was examined in four published food webs in relation to mismatch asymmetry of predator–prey interactions. We found that trophically transmitted parasites exploit downwardly asymmetric interactions in a nonrandom manner, and particular predator–prey pairs contain more trophically transmitted parasites than would be expected by random chance alone. These findings suggest that food web topology has great bearing on the ecology of trophically transmitted parasites, and that consideration of parasite life cycles in the context of food web organization can provide insights into the forces affecting the evolution of trophic transmission.
Keywords:
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