Invasion history shapes host transcriptomic response to a body-snatching parasite
收藏DataONE2021-06-21 更新2025-05-03 收录
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By shuffling biogeographic distributions, biological invasions can both disrupt long-standing associations between hosts and parasites and establish new ones. This creates natural experiments with which to study the ecology and evolution of host-parasite interactions. In estuaries of the Gulf of Mexico, the white-fingered mud crab (Rhithropanopeus harrisii) is infected by a native parasitic barnacle Loxothylacus panopaei (Rhizocephala), which manipulates host physiology and behavior. In the 1960s, L. panopaei was introduced to the Chesapeake Bay and has since expanded along the southeastern Atlantic coast, while host populations in the northeast have so far been spared. We use this system to test the hostâs transcriptomic response to parasitic infection and investigate how this response varies with the parasiteâs invasion history, comparing populations representing (1) long-term sympatry between host and parasite, (2) new associations where the parasite has invaded during the last sixty...
创建时间:
2025-04-21



