2017
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12825
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Interactions among symbionts operate across scales to influence parasite epidemics

Abstract: Parasite epidemics may be influenced by interactions among symbionts, which can depend on past events at multiple spatial scales. Within host individuals, interactions can depend on the sequence in which symbionts infect a host, generating priority effects. Across host individuals, interactions can depend on parasite phenology. To test the roles of parasite interactions and phenology in epidemics, we embedded multiple cohorts of sentinel plants, grown from seeds with and without a vertically transmitted symbio… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(122 citation statements)
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“…For within‐host priority effects to arise, some component of parasite fitness (host mortality, parasite clearance, or transmission rate) must depend on infection order. Most empirical studies on within‐host priority effects measure parasite transmission (Levin , Lohr et al 2010, Hall and Little , Marchetto and Power , Rynkiewicz et al ), though some measure effects on host mortality (Lohr et al 2010, Marchetto and Power ) or parasite clearance (Sandoval‐Aguilar et al ). Because it was the most common focus of the empirical studies, we chose to implement within‐host priority effects by making parasite transmission, specifically the production of infectious propagules, depend on parasite arrival order.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For within‐host priority effects to arise, some component of parasite fitness (host mortality, parasite clearance, or transmission rate) must depend on infection order. Most empirical studies on within‐host priority effects measure parasite transmission (Levin , Lohr et al 2010, Hall and Little , Marchetto and Power , Rynkiewicz et al ), though some measure effects on host mortality (Lohr et al 2010, Marchetto and Power ) or parasite clearance (Sandoval‐Aguilar et al ). Because it was the most common focus of the empirical studies, we chose to implement within‐host priority effects by making parasite transmission, specifically the production of infectious propagules, depend on parasite arrival order.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Priority effects may occur through niche preemption, where early arriving species deplete resources available to later‐arriving species, thus limiting their population growth (Urban and De Meester , Hernandez and Chalcraft , Rasmussen et al 2014, Fukami ). For niche preemption to occur within hosts, coinfecting parasites must compete for limiting resources such as nutrients (Wale et al ) or space (Dobson and Barnes ). Priority effects may also occur via niche modification, where the first species to arrive in a patch alters available niches, thus increasing or decreasing the fitness of later arriving species (Scheffer et al , Petraitis et al , Fukami and Nakajima ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Halliday et al. ). By analogy, dispersal of free‐living species can also depend on their frequency across a landscape (Smith et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…, Halliday et al. ). Together, this information could suggest, at least phenomenologically, the relative pace of dynamics within vs. among hosts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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