Metadata, data, and all R code for replicating the analyses in the paper: Butterworth et al. 2025: The sicker sex is plastic: Sex specific plasticity determines sex biases in pathogen transmission
收藏DataCite Commons2024-11-28 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/dataset/Metadata_data_and_all_R_code_for_replicating_the_analyses_in_the_paper_Butterworth_et_al_2025_The_sicker_sex_is_plastic_Sex_specific_plasticity_determines_sex_biases_in_pathogen_transmission/27886818
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Sex differences are predicted to play an important role in the spread and evolution of pathogens. However, attempts to generalize the ‘sicker’ sex are often challenged by intraspecific variability of sex-biases across the infection process. Sex specific plasticity provides a framework to resolve this by elucidating how infection is shaped at the sex, pathogen, environment interface. Using the<i> Daphnia magna</i> and <i>Pasteuria ramosa </i>system, we measure infection outcomes for males and females across three temperatures and seven pathogen densities to quantify how sex specific plasticity shapes susceptibility, pathogen loads, and ultimately transmission. We find unique forms of plasticity at each stage of infection – including equivalent, sex-specific, and divergent plasticity. Integrating these into a single estimate of transmission reveals a clear pattern – male-biased transmission at cold temperatures, and female-biased transmission at warm temperatures. Sex specific thermal plasticity thus determines the ‘sicker’ sex, with implications for pathogen spread and evolution in a warming world.
提供机构:
Monash University
创建时间:
2024-11-22



