Data from: Adaptive division of growth and development between hosts in helminths with two-host life cycles

Benesh, Daniel ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4572-9546, Chubb, James C. and Parker, Geoff A. (2022) Data from: Adaptive division of growth and development between hosts in helminths with two-host life cycles. [Data Collection]

External DOI: 10.5061/dryad.6hdr7sr3k

Description

Parasitic worms (helminths) with complex life cycles divide growth and development between successive hosts. Using data from 597 species of acanthocephalans, cestodes, and nematodes with two-host life cycles, we found that helminths with larger intermediate hosts were more likely to infect larger, endothermic definitive hosts, although some evolutionarily shifts in definitive host mass occurred without changes in intermediate host mass. Life-history theory predicts parasites to shift growth to hosts in which they can grow rapidly and/or safely. Accordingly, helminth species grew relatively less as larvae and more as adults if they infected smaller intermediate hosts and/or larger, endothermic definitive hosts. Growing larger than expected in one host, relative to host mass/endothermy, was not associated with growing less in the other host, implying a lack of cross-host tradeoffs. Rather, some helminth orders had both large larvae and large adults. Within these taxa, though, size at maturity in the definitive host was unaffected by changes to larval growth, as predicted by optimality models. Parasite life-history strategies were mostly (though not entirely) consistent with theoretical expectations, suggesting that helminths adaptively divide growth and development between the multiple hosts in their complex life cycles.

Keywords: Dryad,Acanthocephala,Nematoda,Cestoda,adaptive decoupling hypothesis,life-history model,
Depositing User: Data Catalogue Admin
Date Deposited: 26 Jan 2023 17:29
Last Modified: 26 Jan 2023 18:53
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.6hdr7sr3k
Original Record Link: https://datadryad.org/stash/share/JoyOv0oeuNm7D6YKZfkaZK4DeW8N2KWFVH29G8bsH3s
URI: https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/2030

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