Font Size: a A A

Drivers of immune cost and implications for host protection from parasites

Posted on:2017-02-27Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of South FloridaCandidate:Brace, Amber JFull Text:PDF
GTID:1453390008961838Subject:Parasitology
Abstract/Summary:
Among species, populations, and individuals, there exists a tremendous amount of variation in how hosts respond to, and are thus protected from parasites. Such variation inevitably affects host-parasite dynamics and ultimately how parasites will move through and evolve in communities. A likely factor in the diversity of immune responses seen in nature are the costs associated with activation of the immune system upon exposure to parasites. Costs can manifest in many ways, including changes in resource usage or metabolism, self-damage from inflammatory reactions, lost opportunities (e.g., foraging reproduction), and often as tradeoffs with other physiological processes. However, we do not yet fully understand the factors that influence costs of immune activation across ecological scales, nor the relationship between immune costs and protection from parasites, despite the common assumption that greater costs equates to better protection. For my dissertation, I have investigated large-scale drivers of immune costs, specifically whether life history and/or body mass influence costs of immune activation (Chapter 1), whether magnitude of parasite exposure affects immune activation costs at the population level (Chapter 2), and the relationship between costs of immune activation and benefit in terms of parasite protection (Chapter 3).;M dissertation has identified that broad characteristics such as life history and body mass can be helpful in predicting costs of immune activation and has additionally demonstrated the importance of smaller-scale processes such as the relationship between immune costs and magnitude of exposure at the population level and the relationship between immune costs and benefits at the individual level. These studies have expanded our understanding of the factors that drive variation in immunity at multiple levels and give the field of ecoimmunology a more holistic picture of the species, population and individual-level processes that affect host-parasite interactions within communities. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.).
Keywords/Search Tags:Immune, Population, Parasites, Protection
Related items