Who benefits from reduced reproduction in parasitized hosts? An experimental test using the Pasteuria ramosa-Daphnia magna system

scientific article published on 19 August 2011

Who benefits from reduced reproduction in parasitized hosts? An experimental test using the Pasteuria ramosa-Daphnia magna system is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1017/S0031182011001302
P698PubMed publication ID21854675

P2093author name stringKnut Helge Jensen
Eldfrid J Grepperud
Jon H Mageroy
P2860cites workHost fecundity reduction: a strategy for damage limitation?Q28202774
Empirical support for optimal virulence in a castrating parasiteQ33244375
Evidence for strong host clone-parasite species interactions in the Daphnia microparasite systemQ34201862
Snail-trematode life history interactions: past trends and future directionsQ34479539
Host-parasite coevolution: Insights from the Daphnia-parasite model systemQ34786655
Parasitic castration: the evolution and ecology of body snatchersQ35006240
Ecological implications of parasites in natural Daphnia populationsQ51191740
Parasitic castration: a perspective from a model of dynamic energy budgets.Q51704661
SUBOPTIMAL VIRULENCE OF AN INSECT-PARASITIC NEMATODE.Q52869594
The cause of parasitic infection in natural populations of Daphnia (Crustacea: Cladocera): the role of host genetics.Q55242427
Within- and between-population variation for resistance of Daphnia magna to the bacterial endoparasite Pasteuria ramosa.Q55251629
Development, life cycle, ultrastructure and phylogenetic position ofPasteuria ramosaMetchnikoff 1888: rediscovery of an obligate endoparasite ofDaphnia magnaStrausQ56522073
The Evolution of Virulence When Parasites Cause Host Castration and GigantismQ58128664
Prevalence, Host Specificity and Impact on Host Fecundity of Microparasites and Epibionts in Three Sympatric Daphnia SpeciesQ59509365
A CONSIDERATION OF PATTERNS OF VIRULENCE ARISING FROM HOST-PARASITE COEVOLUTIONQ60492178
Temperature-dependent costs of parasitism and maintenance of polymorphism under genotype-by-environment interactionsQ63976315
Parasite Reproductive Strategy and Evolution of Castration of Hosts by ParasitesQ66950581
The evolution of parasitic diseasesQ80381428
Playing by different rules: the evolution of virulence in sterilizing pathogensQ81791478
P433issue14
P921main subjectPasteuria ramosaQ23817021
Daphnia magnaQ672531
P304page(s)1910-1915
P577publication date2011-08-19
P1433published inParasitologyQ15753259
P1476titleWho benefits from reduced reproduction in parasitized hosts? An experimental test using the Pasteuria ramosa-Daphnia magna system
P478volume138

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q63246335Assessment of parasite virulence in a natural population of a planktonic crustacean
Q89784331Disentangling non-specific and specific transgenerational immune priming components in host-parasite interactions
Q35561241Endoparasite infection has both short- and long-term negative effects on reproductive success of female house sparrows, as revealed by faecal parasitic egg counts
Q63383844Expression of parasite genetic variation changes over the course of infection: implications of within-host dynamics for the evolution of virulence
Q33706531Influence of multiple infection and relatedness on virulence: disease dynamics in an experimental plant population and its castrating parasite
Q34515223Sex-specific effects of a parasite evolving in a female-biased host population
Q51052562Starvation reveals the cause of infection-induced castration and gigantism
Q47126329The virulence-transmission relationship in an obligate killer holds under diverse epidemiological and ecological conditions, but where is the tradeoff?

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