Publication | Open Access
Competitiveness and life-history characteristics of <i>Daphnia</i> with respect to susceptibility to a bacterial pathogen
43
Citations
21
References
2002
Year
Pathogenic MicrobiologyMicrobial PathogensFitnessGeneticsBacterial PathogensNon-host ResistanceBiological EvolutionBacterial PathogenesisDisease ResistanceGenetic DiversityBacterial PathogenMolecular EcologyPathogen TransmissionMicrobial EcologyInfection ControlMolecular AdaptationCrustacean Daphnia MagnaHost-pathogen InteractionsResistant DaphniaD. Magna PopulationsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBiologyMicrobial DiseaseLife-history CharacteristicsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyInduced ResistanceMicrobiologyHost ResistanceMedicine
Abstract Costs of resistance, i.e. trade-offs between resistance to parasites or pathogens and other fitness components, may prevent the fixation of resistant genotypes and therefore explain the maintenance of genetic polymorphism for resistance in the wild. Using two approaches, the cost of resistance to a sterilizing bacterial pathogen were tested for in the crustacean Daphnia magna. First, groups of susceptible and resistant hosts from each of four natural populations were compared in terms of their life-history characteristics. Secondly, we examined the competitiveness of nine clones from one population for which more detailed information on genetic variation for resistance was known. In no case did the results show that competitiveness or life history characteristics of resistant Daphnia systematically differed from susceptible ones. These results suggest that costs of resistance are unlikely to explain the maintenance of genetic variation in D. magna populations. We discuss methods for measuring fitness and speculate on which genetic models of host-parasite co-evolution may apply to the Daphnia-microparasite system.
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