Viral transmission and infection prevalence in a cannibalistic hostâpathogen system
收藏DataONE2023-01-27 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:6f97d4a75c8334873e71620a91c115f94197000b0967974ad00d58b1518998ca
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Cannibalism, while prevalent in the natural world, is often viewed as detrimental to a cannibalâs health, especially when they consume pathogen-infected conspecifics. The argument stems from the idea that cannibalizing infected individuals increases the chance of coming into contact with a pathogen and subsequently becoming infected. Using an insect pest, the fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda), that readily cannibalizes at the larval stage and its lethal pathogen, we experimentally examined how cannibalism affects viral transmission at both an individual and population level. Prior to death, the pathogen in the system stops the larval host from growing, resulting in infected individuals being smaller than healthy individuals. This leads to size-structured cannibalism of infected individuals with the larger healthy larvae consuming the smaller infected larvae, which is commonly observed. At the individual level, we show that the probability of cannibalism is relatively high for bo..., Please see associated manuscript and associated README file.,
创建时间:
2023-11-29



