Sakanari J A, Moser M
Department of Pathology, University of California, San Francisco 94143.
J Parasitol. 1990 Jun;76(3):420-3.
Introduction of striped bass to the west coast from the east coast of the U.S.A. provided the opportunity to study a recent host-parasite association in a marine system. An indigenous species of parasite was known to induce pathological changes in the introduced population. Because the west coast population has been in association with this pathogenic parasite more than 20 generations, we predicted that the host reaction of the west coast population would be less severe compared to that of the naive east coast stock of striped bass. This prediction was tested by conducting reciprocal infection experiments with east and west coast hosts and parasites. The group of west coast striped bass had a lower intensity of infection and exhibited less tissue damage compared to the group of east coast striped bass. We suggest that selection has acted only on the host and is driven by parasite-induced host mortality. This type of 1-sided selection is in contrast to present models of the evolution of host-parasite associations.
将条纹鲈从美国东海岸引入西海岸,为研究海洋系统中近期形成的宿主 - 寄生虫关系提供了契机。已知一种本地寄生虫会在引入的条纹鲈种群中引发病理变化。由于西海岸的条纹鲈种群与这种致病寄生虫共存已超过20代,我们预测,与未接触过该寄生虫的东海岸条纹鲈原始种群相比,西海岸种群的宿主反应会没那么强烈。通过用东、西海岸的宿主和寄生虫进行相互感染实验,对这一预测进行了验证。与东海岸条纹鲈组相比,西海岸条纹鲈组的感染强度较低,组织损伤也较小。我们认为,选择仅作用于宿主,且由寄生虫引起的宿主死亡所驱动。这种单边选择与目前关于宿主 - 寄生虫关系进化的模型形成对比。