4.7 Article

Travelling with a parasite: the evolution of resistance and dispersal syndromes during experimental range expansion

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1966

Keywords

dispersal syndromes; eco-evolutionary dynamics; host-parasite interactions; invasion front; range expansion; resistance

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The interaction between range expansion and parasite treatments affects the evolution of host dispersal syndromes, with front populations showing different associations of growth parameters and swimming behaviors than core populations. Parasitism reshapes trait associations, with hosts evolved in the presence of the parasite exhibiting increased resistance and reduced dispersal.
Rapid evolutionary change during range expansions can lead to diverging range core and front populations, with the emergence of dispersal syndromes (coupled responses in dispersal and life-history traits). Besides intraspecific effects, range expansions may be impacted by interspecific interactions such as parasitism. Yet, despite the potentially large impact of parasites imposing additional selective pressures on the host, their role on range expansions remains largely unexplored. Using microcosm populations of the ciliate Paramecium caudatum and its bacterial parasite Holospora undulata, we studied experimental range expansions under parasite presence or absence. We found that the interaction of range expansion and parasite treatments affected the evolution of host dispersal syndromes. Namely, front populations showed different associations of population growth parameters and swimming behaviours than core populations, indicating divergent evolution. Parasitism reshaped trait associations, with hosts evolved in the presence of the parasite exhibiting overall increased resistance and reduced dispersal. Nonetheless, when comparing infected range core and front populations, we found a positive association, suggesting joint evolution of resistance and dispersal at the front. We conclude that host-parasite interactions during range expansions can change evolutionary trajectories; this in turn may feedback on the ecological dynamics of the range expansion and parasite epidemics.

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