Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis?
Host behavioural manipulation is a phenomenon that occurs in various host-parasite systems, and has been widely studied. Many have argued that manipulation is costly to a parasite and there would be selection pressures against its prevalence. In the examples of conflicting manipulative parasites, hi...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-494912023-02-28T18:02:53Z Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? Phua, Samantha Jo Su-Ying School of Biological Sciences Ajai Vyas DRNTU::Science Host behavioural manipulation is a phenomenon that occurs in various host-parasite systems, and has been widely studied. Many have argued that manipulation is costly to a parasite and there would be selection pressures against its prevalence. In the examples of conflicting manipulative parasites, hitch-hikers and conspecifics that establish in different host organs, this review explores the various costs that manipulative parasites incur, showing that manipulation of a host is indeed costly. However, there are also ways in which parasites are able to lower these costs, shown in the example of ‘love-potion’ parasites, or by forming commensal relationships with the hosts. Overall, manipulation would prevail in a parasite population for as long as manipulation is beneficial to the parasite, the benefits being better transmission to a definitive host and the eventual improved fecundity and survival. Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences 2012-05-21T02:40:12Z 2012-05-21T02:40:12Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49491 en Nanyang Technological University 22 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Science Phua, Samantha Jo Su-Ying Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
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Host behavioural manipulation is a phenomenon that occurs in various host-parasite systems, and has been widely studied. Many have argued that manipulation is costly to a parasite and there would be selection pressures against its prevalence. In the examples of conflicting manipulative parasites, hitch-hikers and conspecifics that establish in different host organs, this review explores the various costs that manipulative parasites incur, showing that manipulation of a host is indeed costly. However, there are also ways in which parasites are able to lower these costs, shown in the example of ‘love-potion’ parasites, or by forming commensal relationships with the hosts. Overall, manipulation would prevail in a parasite population for as long as manipulation is beneficial to the parasite, the benefits being better transmission to a definitive host and the eventual improved fecundity and survival. |
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School of Biological Sciences |
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School of Biological Sciences Phua, Samantha Jo Su-Ying |
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Final Year Project |
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Phua, Samantha Jo Su-Ying |
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Phua, Samantha Jo Su-Ying |
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Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
title_short |
Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
title_full |
Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
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Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
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Is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
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is parasitic behavioural manipulation endangered as a hypothesis? |
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2012 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49491 |
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