2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.pt.2015.07.005
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Parasite–Parasite Interactions in the Wild: How To Detect Them?

Abstract: Inter-specific interactions between parasites impact on parasite intra-host dynamics, host health, and disease management. Identifying and understanding interaction mechanisms in the wild is crucial for wildlife disease management. It is however complex because several scales are interlaced. Parasite-parasite interactions are likely to occur via mechanisms at the within-host level, but also at upper levels (host population and community). Furthermore, interactions occurring at one level of organization spread … Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…We present evidence that biotic associations play important roles in the occurrences and infection likelihoods of haematozoan parasites. Our description of parasite cooccurrence patterns provides critical new insights into disease ecology, as parasite associations are expected across many host systems (Bell et al 2006;P erez-Tris et al 2007;Johnson & Buller 2011;Vaumourin et al 2015), yet evidence from wildlife is biased towards mammalian hosts (Lello et al 2004;Tompkins et al 2011;Hellard et al 2015). Additionally, we show that co-infections are difficult to identify using PCR alone, a finding demonstrated for many host-pathogen systems (Valki unas et al 2006;Dyachenko et al 2010;Grybchuk-Ieremenko et al 2014;Moustafa et al 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
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“…We present evidence that biotic associations play important roles in the occurrences and infection likelihoods of haematozoan parasites. Our description of parasite cooccurrence patterns provides critical new insights into disease ecology, as parasite associations are expected across many host systems (Bell et al 2006;P erez-Tris et al 2007;Johnson & Buller 2011;Vaumourin et al 2015), yet evidence from wildlife is biased towards mammalian hosts (Lello et al 2004;Tompkins et al 2011;Hellard et al 2015). Additionally, we show that co-infections are difficult to identify using PCR alone, a finding demonstrated for many host-pathogen systems (Valki unas et al 2006;Dyachenko et al 2010;Grybchuk-Ieremenko et al 2014;Moustafa et al 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…; Hellard et al . ). Additionally, we show that co‐infections are difficult to identify using PCR alone, a finding demonstrated for many host–pathogen systems (Valkiūnas et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Second, confounding factors such as a common vector, behavior or other host heterogeneities in disease exposure, or spatial heterogeneities in disease risk might also account for the association (Johnson and Buller , Hellard et al. , ). Third, chronic malaria may compromise immune function, making birds more susceptible to active pox infection and increasing the likelihood of severe pox infections, which lead to permanent deformities seen in old pox.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these models can reliably measure interactions within hosts (Hellard et al . ), they implicitly assume that the strength and direction of pairwise interactions among coinfecting symbionts is the same regardless of the historical context in which they occur (i.e. ‘deterministic’ following Fukami ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%