Publication | Closed Access
Large Shifts in Pathogen Virulence Relate to Host Population Structure
207
Citations
8
References
2004
Year
PathogenicityHost FactorViral EvolutionInfectious Disease ModellingPathogen TransmissionMedicineEvolutionary BiologyPathogenesisPathogen PopulationsVirologyDisease EmergencePathogen CharacterizationRapid EmergenceMicrobiologyPathogen VirulenceInterspecies TransmissionPathogen Virulence RelateHost-pathogen Interactions
Theory on the evolution of virulence generally predicts selection for an optimal level of virulence determined by trade-offs with transmission and/or recovery. Here we consider the evolution of pathogen virulence in hosts who acquire long-lived immunity and live in a spatially structured population. We show theoretically that large shifts in virulence may occur in pathogen populations as a result of a bistability in evolutionary dynamics caused by the local contact or social population structure of the host. This model provides an explanation for the rapid emergence of the highly virulent strains of rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus.
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