“…Keywords: Gyrodactylus, heritable parasite resistance, life history, parental investment theory, parent-offspring regression, transgenerational immune priming, sex-specific response to infection Introduction: Infected parents may change the quantity and quality of the offspring they produce, both because of the energetic constraints (Tizard, 2008) or pathology (Armour et al, 2020;Billi et al, 2019;Khan et al, 2017) associated with infection, and because the optimal investment in defence (Boots & Bowers, 2004;Graham, 2013;Houston et al, 2007;Tschirren & Richner, 2006;Viney et al, 2005) and reproductive strategy may differ under the threat of infection (Schmid-Hempel, 2003;Sheldon & Verhulst, 1996). Intuitively, parental infection could induce the production of fewer, lower quality offspring due to decreased parental resources (Hagmayer et al, 2020;Vantaux et al, 2014). However, infection can also induce the production of more offspring as infected parents 'terminally invest': hosts increase reproductive output at the expense of their own defence against infection in an effort to produce offspring before their own death (Duffield et al, 2017).…”