2022
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.4004
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Host preference of field‐derived Schistosoma mansoni is influenced by snail host compatibility and infection status

Abstract: Schistosome parasites cause a chronic inflammatory disease in humans, and recent studies have emphasized the importance of control programs for understanding the aquatic phases of schistosomiasis transmission. The host-seeking behavior of larval schistosomes (miracidia) for their snail intermediate hosts plays a critical role in parasite transmission. Using field-derived strains of Kenyan snails and parasites, we tested two main hypotheses: (1) Parasites prefer the most compatible host, and (2) parasites avoid… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This latter observation is consistent with the nutritional and reproductive benefit that E. caproni gains from infecting an S. mansoni -infected snail (Carpenter et al 2021). A follow-up study (Laidemitt et al 2022) extended these findings by showing that miracidia avoided snails infected with the dominant competitor Patigifer but moved toward snails infected with a subordinate xiphiodiocercarial infection or with the metacerarcial stage of Patagifer.…”
Section: The Parasite Lensmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This latter observation is consistent with the nutritional and reproductive benefit that E. caproni gains from infecting an S. mansoni -infected snail (Carpenter et al 2021). A follow-up study (Laidemitt et al 2022) extended these findings by showing that miracidia avoided snails infected with the dominant competitor Patigifer but moved toward snails infected with a subordinate xiphiodiocercarial infection or with the metacerarcial stage of Patagifer.…”
Section: The Parasite Lensmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…How such direct measures of transmission, independent of within-host processes (e.g. virulence), actually scale up and affect the spread of T. urticae across a population of potential hosts is not straightforward and may well depend on the presence and relative densities of interspecific competitors [20]. Moreover, different life-history strategies could co-exist in a parasite population, some maximizing fitness within hosts and others maximizing the spread across hosts.…”
Section: (C) Correlations Between Within-host Traits and Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interactions among parasites may also impact transmission-related traits independently of growth and virulence, such as triggering dispersal from hosts infected with competitors or impacting whether a new host becomes infected. Indeed, certain parasites avoid or choose a host, or a host tissue, depending on its infection status [20,21]. This means that multiple parasites in the environment have the potential to impact parasite life-history ecology and evolution at different scales, not restricted to the within-host environment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, coinfection rates observed in natura are generally lower than this theoretical expectation. Interspecific competition leading to the rapid exclusion of one interacting species, recruitment heterogeneity either due to random or parasite behaviours that limit co-infections, immune priming mechanisms and high cost of co-infection on hosts fitness, may explain the departure of this theoretical expectation as generally observed in natura (15,16). Intriguingly, the effect of host abundance on co-infection rates is generally neglected since this theoretical expectation relies on the relative prevalence of co-infection, which corresponds to the proportion of hosts that are infected (or co-infected) among all hosts present in the environment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%