Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA24061, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA22903, USA.
Parasitology. 2021 Mar;148(3):274-288. doi: 10.1017/S0031182020002048. Epub 2020 Oct 23.
An animal's social behaviour both influences and changes in response to its parasites. Here we consider these bidirectional links between host social behaviours and parasite infection, both those that occur from ecological vs evolutionary processes. First, we review how social behaviours of individuals and groups influence ecological patterns of parasite transmission. We then discuss how parasite infection, in turn, can alter host social interactions by changing the behaviour of both infected and uninfected individuals. Together, these ecological feedbacks between social behaviour and parasite infection can result in important epidemiological consequences. Next, we consider the ways in which host social behaviours evolve in response to parasites, highlighting constraints that arise from the need for hosts to maintain benefits of sociality while minimizing fitness costs of parasites. Finally, we consider how host social behaviours shape the population genetic structure of parasites and the evolution of key parasite traits, such as virulence. Overall, these bidirectional relationships between host social behaviours and parasites are an important yet often underappreciated component of population-level disease dynamics and host-parasite coevolution.
动物的社会行为既影响又响应其寄生虫。在这里,我们考虑宿主社会行为和寄生虫感染之间的这些双向联系,包括来自生态和进化过程的联系。首先,我们回顾了个体和群体的社会行为如何影响寄生虫传播的生态模式。然后,我们讨论了寄生虫感染如何通过改变感染和未感染个体的行为来改变宿主的社会互动。这些社会行为和寄生虫感染之间的生态反馈共同导致了重要的流行病学后果。接下来,我们考虑了宿主社会行为对寄生虫的反应方式,强调了从需要宿主维持社会性的好处同时最小化寄生虫的适应成本的角度出现的限制。最后,我们考虑了宿主社会行为如何塑造寄生虫的种群遗传结构和关键寄生虫特征(如毒力)的进化。总的来说,宿主社会行为和寄生虫之间的这种双向关系是群体疾病动态和宿主-寄生虫共同进化的一个重要但往往被低估的组成部分。