Literature DB >> 17111182

The parasite connection in ecosystems and macroevolution.

Adolf Seilacher1, Wolf-Ernst Reif, Peter Wenk.   

Abstract

In addition to their obvious negative effects ("pathogens"), endoparasites of various kinds play an important role in shaping and maintaining modern animal communities. In the long-term, parasites including pathogens are indispensable entities of any ecosystem. To understand this, it is essential that one changes the viewpoint from the host's interests to that of the parasite. Together with geographic isolation, trophic arms race, symbiosis, and niche partitioning, all parasites (including balance strategists, i.e. seemingly non-pathogenic ones) modulate their hosts' population densities. In addition, heteroxenic parasites control the balance between predator and prey species, particularly if final and intermediate hosts are vertebrates. Thereby, such parasites enhance the bonds in ecosystems and help maintain the status quo. As the links between eukaryotic parasites and their hosts are less flexible than trophic connections, parasite networks probably contributed to the observed stasis and incumbency of ecosystems over geologic time, in spite of continuous Darwinian innovation. Because heteroxenic parasites target taxonomic levels above that of the species (e.g. families), these taxa may have also become units of selection in global catastrophies. Macroevolutionary extrapolations, however, are difficult to verify because endoparasites cannot fossilize.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17111182     DOI: 10.1007/s00114-006-0164-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naturwissenschaften        ISSN: 0028-1042


  42 in total

1.  Survival without recovery after mass extinctions.

Authors:  David Jablonski
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-06-11       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Origin of the superflock of cichlid fishes from Lake Victoria, East Africa.

Authors:  Erik Verheyen; Walter Salzburger; Jos Snoeks; Axel Meyer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2003-03-20       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Asymmetric coevolutionary networks facilitate biodiversity maintenance.

Authors:  Jordi Bascompte; Pedro Jordano; Jens M Olesen
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-04-21       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Parasite-driven extinction in spatially explicit host-parasite systems.

Authors:  Michael Boots; Akira Sasaki
Journal:  Am Nat       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 3.926

Review 5.  Current research on Sarcocystis species of domestic animals.

Authors:  A M Tenter
Journal:  Int J Parasitol       Date:  1995-11       Impact factor: 3.981

6.  Digenetic trematodes: multiplication of the intramolluscan stages in some species is potentially unlimited.

Authors:  J Dönges; M Götzelmann
Journal:  J Parasitol       Date:  1988-10       Impact factor: 1.276

7.  Intermediate and transport hosts in the natural history of Toxoplasma gondii.

Authors:  G D Wallace
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  1973-07       Impact factor: 2.345

8.  Sympatric speciation suggested by monophyly of crater lake cichlids.

Authors:  U K Schliewen; D Tautz; S Pääbo
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1994-04-14       Impact factor: 49.962

9.  Decrease of psychomotor performance in subjects with latent 'asymptomatic' toxoplasmosis.

Authors:  J Havlícek; Z G Gasová; A P Smith; K Zvára; J Flegr
Journal:  Parasitology       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 3.234

10.  Learning capacity and memory of normal and Toxoplasma-infected laboratory rats and mice.

Authors:  P A Witting
Journal:  Z Parasitenkd       Date:  1979
View more
  2 in total

1.  Grouping behaviour impacts on the parasitic pressure and squamation of sharks.

Authors:  Humberto G Ferrón; Jose F Palacios-Abella
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-05-18       Impact factor: 5.530

2.  Evidence for Unknown Sarcocystis-Like Infection in Stranded Striped Dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) from the Ligurian Sea, Italy.

Authors:  Federica Giorda; Umberto Romani-Cremaschi; Antoinette E Marsh; Carla Grattarola; Barbara Iulini; Alessandra Pautasso; Katia Varello; Enrica Berio; Paola Gazzuola; Letizia Marsili; Cristina E Di Francesco; Maria Goria; Federica Verna; Tania Audino; Simone Peletto; Maria Caramelli; Mercedes Fernández-Escobar; Eva Sierra; Antonio Fernández; Rafael Calero-Bernal; Cristina Casalone
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-22       Impact factor: 2.752

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.