Publications by authors named "P Schmid-Hempel"

Article Synopsis
  • Leishbuviridae is a group of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses that infect trypanosomatid parasites, potentially affecting their virulence.
  • Researchers screened for viruses in Crithidia bombi, a parasite that harms bumblebees, and found a high prevalence of a virus called Crithidia bombi leishbuvirus 1 among samples from Europe and North America.
  • The study suggests that bumblebee mobility and the presence of different strains lead to significant viral exchange among C. bombi isolates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The bumblebee Bombus terrestris is commonly infected by a trypanosomatid gut parasite Crithidia bombi. This system shows a striking degree of genetic specificity where host genotypes are susceptible to different genotypes of parasite. To a degree, variation in host gene expression underlies these differences, however, the effects of standing genetic variation has not yet been explored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change is predicted to affect host-parasite interactions, and for some hosts, parasite infection is expected to increase with rising temperatures. Global population declines of important pollinators already have been attributed to climate change and parasitism. However, the role of climate in driving parasite infection and the genetic basis for pollinator hosts to respond often remain obscure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A useful discussion of defence strategies cannot do without linking defence mechanisms to their function, that is, their contributions to fitness. Whereas the former is the domain of immunology, the latter is the subject of evolutionary ecology. For this, the concepts of the defence chart and the disease space can be used to connect the two domains and to sharpen the focus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parasites and their social hosts form many different relationships. But what kind of selection regimes are important? A look at the parameters that determine fitness of the two parties suggests that social hosts differ from solitary ones primarily in the structure of transmission pathways. Because transmission is, both, the physical encounter of a new host and infecting it, several different elements determine parasite transmission success.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF