Myriad ecological and evolutionary factors can influence whether a particular parasite successfully transmits to a new host during a disease outbreak, with consequences for the structure and diversity of parasite populations. However, even though the diversity and evolution of parasite populations are of clear fundamental and applied importance, we have surprisingly few studies that track how genetic structure of parasites changes during naturally occurring outbreaks in non-human populations. Here, we used population genetic approaches to reveal how genotypes of a bacterial parasite, change over time, focusing on how infecting genotypes change during the course of epidemics in populations in two lakes. We found evidence for genetic change - and, therefore, evolution - of the parasite during outbreaks. In one lake, genotypes were structured by sampling date; in both lakes, genetic distance between groups of isolates increased with time between sampling. Diversity in parasite populations remained constant over epidemics, although one epidemic (which was large) had low genetic diversity while the other epidemic (which was small) had high genetic diversity. Our findings demonstrate that patterns of parasite evolution differ between outbreaks; future studies exploring the feedbacks among epidemic size, host diversity, and parasite genetic diversity would improve our understanding of parasite dynamics and evolution.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9843074PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9676DOI Listing

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