SELECTION OF BENEVOLENCE IN A HOST–PARASITE SYSTEM
- 1 June 1991
- Vol. 45 (4), 875-882
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1991.tb04356.x
Abstract
A paradigm for the evolution of cooperation between parasites and their hosts argues that the mode of parasite transmission is critical to the long-term maintenance of cooperation. Cooperation is not expected to be maintained whenever the chief mode of transmission is horizontal: a parasite's progeny infect hosts unrelated to their parent's host. Cooperation is expected to be maintained if the chief mode of transmission is vertical: a parasite's progeny infect only the parent's host or descendants of that host. This paradigm was tested using bacteria and filamentous bacteriophage (f1). When cells harboring different variants of these phage were cultured so that no infectious spread was allowed, ensuring that all parasite transmission was vertical, selection favored the variants that were most benevolent to the host—those that least harmed host growth rate. By changing the culture conditions so that horizontal spread of the phage was allowed, the selective advantage of the benevolent forms was lost. These experiments thus support the theoretical arguments that mode of transmission is a major determinant in the evolution of cooperation between a parasite and its host.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (BSR 8657640)
- Presbyterian Historical Society (GM 32095)
- National Institutes of Health
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Distinguishing mechanisms for the evolution of co-operationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1991
- A Consensus Combined P-Value Test and the Family-Wide Significance of Component TestsBiometrics, 1990
- Generating novelty by symbiosisNature, 1989
- Evolution of a bacteria/plasmid associationNature, 1988
- Evolution of plague virulenceNature, 1988
- A New Probability Model for Determining Exact P-Values for 2 x 2 Contingency Tables When Comparing Binomial ProportionsBiometrics, 1988
- Transmission Modes and Evolution of the Parasitism‐Mutualism ContinuumaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1987
- Host-Parasite Relations, Vectors, and the Evolution of Disease SeverityAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1983
- Coevolution of hosts and parasitesParasitology, 1982
- The Evolution of CooperationScience, 1981