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      Age, parasites, and condition affect humoral immune response in tropical pythons

        ,
      Behavioral Ecology
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Most cited references23

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          Ecological immunology: costly parasite defences and trade-offs in evolutionary ecology

          In the face of continuous threats from parasites, hosts have evolved an elaborate series of preventative and controlling measures - the immune system - in order to reduce the fitness costs of parasitism. However, these measures do have associated costs. Viewing an individual's immune response to parasites as being subject to optimization in the face of other demands offers potential insights into mechanisms of life history trade-offs, sexual selection, parasite-mediated selection and population dynamics. We discuss some recent results that have been obtained by practitioners of this approach in natural and semi-natural populations, and suggest some ways in which this field may progress in the near future.
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            Variation in immune defence as a question of evolutionary ecology.

            The evolutionary-ecology approach to studying immune defences has generated a number of hypotheses that help to explain the observed variance in responses. Here, selected topics are reviewed in an attempt to identify the common problems, connections and generalities of the approach. In particular, the cost of immune defence, response specificity, sexual selection, neighbourhood effects and questions of optimal defence portfolios are discussed. While these questions still warrant further investigation, future challenges are the development of synthetic concepts for vertebrate and invertebrate systems and also of the theory that predicts immune responses based on a priori principles of evolutionary ecology.
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              Trade-off between parasitoid resistance and larval competitive ability in Drosophila melanogaster.

              The extent to which an organism is selected to invest in defences against pathogens and parasites depends on the advantages that ensue should infection occur, but also on the costs of maintaining defences in the absence of infection. The presence of heritable variation in resistance suggests that costs exist, but we know very little about the nature or magnitude of these costs in natural populations of animals. A powerful technique for identifying trade-offs between fitness components is the study of correlated responses to artificial selection. We have selected Drosophila melanogaster for improved resistance against an endoparasitoid, Asobara tabida. Endoparasitoids are insects whose larvae develop internally within the body of other insects, eventually killing them, although their hosts can sometimes survive attack by mounting a cellular immune response. We found that reduced larval competitive ability in unparasitized D. melanogaster is a correlated response to artificial selection for improved resistance against A. tabida. The strength of selection for competitive ability and parasitoid resistance is likely to vary temporally and spatially, which may explain the observed heritable variation in resistance.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behavioral Ecology
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1465-7279
                1045-2249
                January 2006
                January 01 2006
                October 12 2005
                January 2006
                January 01 2006
                October 12 2005
                : 17
                : 1
                : 20-24
                Article
                10.1093/beheco/ari091
                77c81849-d5dc-4e9a-947a-ccab7fcee360
                © 2005
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