School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7RH, UK
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Aug 22;285(1885):20180928. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.0928.
Host-pathogen coevolution is central to shaping natural communities and is the focus of much experimental and theoretical study. For tractability, the vast majority of studies assume the host and pathogen interact in isolation, yet in reality, they will form one part of complex communities, with predation likely to be a particularly key interaction. Here, I present, to my knowledge, the first theoretical study to assess the impact of predation on the coevolution of costly host resistance and pathogen transmission. I show that fluctuating selection is most likely when predators selectively prey upon infected hosts, but that saturating predation, owing to large handling times, dramatically restricts the potential for fluctuations. I also show how host evolution may drive either enemy to extinction, and demonstrate that while predation selects for low host resistance and high pathogen infectivity, ecological feedbacks mean this results in lower infection rates when predators are present. I emphasize the importance of accounting for varying population sizes, and place the models in the context of recent experimental studies.
宿主-病原体共同进化是塑造自然群落的核心,也是许多实验和理论研究的重点。为了便于研究,绝大多数研究都假设宿主和病原体是相互孤立地进行相互作用的,但实际上,它们将形成复杂群落的一部分,捕食很可能是一个特别关键的相互作用。在这里,我提出了,据我所知,第一个评估捕食对代价高昂的宿主抗性和病原体传播共同进化影响的理论研究。我表明,当捕食者有选择地捕食感染宿主时,波动选择最有可能发生,但由于处理时间长而导致的饱和捕食,极大地限制了波动的可能性。我还展示了宿主进化如何可能导致任一敌物灭绝,并证明尽管捕食选择了低宿主抗性和高病原体感染力,但生态反馈意味着当存在捕食者时,这会导致较低的感染率。我强调了考虑种群大小变化的重要性,并将模型置于最近的实验研究背景下。