Hybrid Fitness in a Locally Adapted Parasite
- 1 December 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 172 (6) , 772-782
- https://doi.org/10.1086/592866
Abstract
The parasite (Red Queen) hypothesis for the maintenance of sexual reproduction and genetic diversity assumes that host-parasite interactions result from tight genetic specificity. Hence, hybridization between divergent parasite populations would be expected to disrupt adaptive gene combinations, leading to reduced infectivity on exposure to parental sympatric hosts, as long as gene effects are nonadditive. In contrast, hybridization would not cause reduced infectivity on allopatric hosts unless the divergent parasite populations possess alleles that are intrinsically incompatible when they are combined. In three different experiments, we compared the infectivity of locally adapted parasite (trematode) populations with that of F(1) hybrid parasites when exposed to host (snail) populations that were sympatric to one of the two parasite populations. We tested for intrinsic genetic incompatibilities in two experiments by including one host population that was allopatric to both parasite populations. As predicted, when the target host populations were sympatric to the parasite populations, the hybrids were significantly less infective than the parental average, while hybrid parasites on allopatric hosts were not, thereby ruling out intrinsic genetic incompatibilities. The results are consistent with nonadditive gene effects and tightly specific host-driven selection underlying parasite divergence, as envisioned by coevolutionary theory and the Red Queen hypothesis.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- MINIMAL SELFING, FEW CLONES, AND NO AMONG‐HOST GENETIC STRUCTURE IN A HERMAPHRODITIC PARASITE WITH ASEXUAL LARVAL PROPAGATIONEvolution, 2006
- PARASITE LOCAL ADAPTATION IN A GEOGRAPHIC MOSAICEvolution, 2006
- Species Interactions and the Evolution of SexScience, 2004
- A New Statistical Test of Fitness Set Data from Reciprocal Transplant Experiments Involving Intermediate PhenotypesThe American Naturalist, 2004
- Modelling infection as a two-step process combining gene-for-gene and matching-allele geneticsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2003
- GENETIC VARIATION IN A HOST-PARASITE ASSOCIATION: POTENTIAL FOR COEVOLUTION AND FREQUENCY-DEPENDENT SELECTIONEvolution, 2001
- Resistance of Hybrid Plants and Animals to Herbivores, Pathogens, and ParasitesAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1999
- Parasite dose, prevalence of infection and local adaptation in a hostparasite systemParasitology, 1999
- Coevolutionary Chase in Exploiter–Victim Systems with Polygenic CharactersJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1997
- Sex versus Non-Sex versus ParasiteOikos, 1980