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The ghost of hosts past: impacts of host extinction on parasite specificity

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0351

Keywords

host-parasite interaction; phylogenetic ecology; coextinction; virulence evolution; infectious diseases

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF
  2. NIH
  3. USDA [NSF DEB 1316223]
  4. German Science Foundation [HU 2748/1-1]
  5. Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation [PID2019109711RJ-I00]
  6. University of Toronto Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Postdoctoral Fellowship

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Research indicates that host extinction may significantly impact the host specificity of parasites, leading to changes in the evolutionary patterns of host-parasite interactions. Through examples from historical extinctions, contemporary endangerment, and future biodiversity loss, a better understanding of the impact of host extinction on current host-parasite interactions can be gained.
A growing body of research is focused on the extinction of parasite species in response to host endangerment and declines. Beyond the loss of parasite species richness, host extinction can impact apparent parasite host specificity, as measured by host richness or the phylogenetic distances among hosts. Such impacts on the distribution of parasites across the host phylogeny can have knock-on effects that may reshape the adaptation of both hosts and parasites, ultimately shifting the evolutionary landscape underlying the potential for emergence and the evolution of virulence across hosts. Here, we examine how the reshaping of host phylogenies through extinction may impact the host specificity of parasites, and offer examples from historical extinctions, present-day endangerment, and future projections of biodiversity loss. We suggest that an improved understanding of the impact of host extinction on contemporary host-parasite interactions may shed light on core aspects of disease ecology, including comparative studies of host specificity, virulence evolution in multi-host parasite systems, and future trajectories for host and parasite biodiversity. This article is part of the theme issue 'Infectious disease macroecology: parasite diversity and dynamics across the globe'.

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