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Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system.

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Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system. / Reeson, A. F.; Wilson, Kenneth; Cory, Jenny S. et al.
In: Oecologia, Vol. 124, No. 3, 08.2000, p. 373-380.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Reeson, AF, Wilson, K, Cory, JS, Hankard, P, Weeks, JM, Goulson, D & Hails, RS 2000, 'Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system.', Oecologia, vol. 124, no. 3, pp. 373-380. https://doi.org/10.1007/s004420000397

APA

Reeson, A. F., Wilson, K., Cory, J. S., Hankard, P., Weeks, J. M., Goulson, D., & Hails, R. S. (2000). Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system. Oecologia, 124(3), 373-380. https://doi.org/10.1007/s004420000397

Vancouver

Reeson AF, Wilson K, Cory JS, Hankard P, Weeks JM, Goulson D et al. Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system. Oecologia. 2000 Aug;124(3):373-380. doi: 10.1007/s004420000397

Author

Reeson, A. F. ; Wilson, Kenneth ; Cory, Jenny S. et al. / Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system. In: Oecologia. 2000 ; Vol. 124, No. 3. pp. 373-380.

Bibtex

@article{85a56360a49342ceaaa1b2f1214e696b,
title = "Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system.",
abstract = "In models of insect–pathogen interactions, the transmission parameter (ν) is the term that describes the efficiency with which pathogens are transmitted between hosts. There are two components to the transmission parameter, namely the rate at which the host encounters pathogens (contact rate) and the rate at which contact between host and pathogen results in infection (host susceptibility). Here it is shown that in larvae of Spodoptera exempta (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), in which rearing density triggers the expression of one of two alternative phenotypes, the high-density morph is associated with an increase in larval activity. This response is likely to result in an increase in the contact rate between hosts and pathogens. Rearing density is also known to affect susceptibility of S. exempta to pathogens, with the high-density morph showing increased resistance to a baculovirus. In order to determine whether density-dependent differences observed in the laboratory might affect transmission in the wild, a field trial was carried out to estimate the transmission parameter for S. exempta and its nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV). The transmission parameter was found to be significantly higher among larvae reared in isolation than among those reared in crowds. Models of insect–pathogen interactions, in which the transmission parameter is assumed to be constant, will therefore not fully describe the S. exempta-NPV system. The finding that crowding can influence transmission in this way has major implications for both the long-term population dynamics and the invasion dynamics of insect–pathogen systems.",
keywords = "Transmission - Mass action assumption - Phase polyphenism - Spodoptera exempta - Baculoviruses",
author = "Reeson, {A. F.} and Kenneth Wilson and Cory, {Jenny S.} and P. Hankard and Weeks, {J. M.} and D. Goulson and Hails, {R. S.}",
year = "2000",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1007/s004420000397",
language = "English",
volume = "124",
pages = "373--380",
journal = "Oecologia",
issn = "0029-8549",
publisher = "Springer-Verlag",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of phenotypic plasticity on pathogen transmission to the field in a Lepidoptera-NPV system.

AU - Reeson, A. F.

AU - Wilson, Kenneth

AU - Cory, Jenny S.

AU - Hankard, P.

AU - Weeks, J. M.

AU - Goulson, D.

AU - Hails, R. S.

PY - 2000/8

Y1 - 2000/8

N2 - In models of insect–pathogen interactions, the transmission parameter (ν) is the term that describes the efficiency with which pathogens are transmitted between hosts. There are two components to the transmission parameter, namely the rate at which the host encounters pathogens (contact rate) and the rate at which contact between host and pathogen results in infection (host susceptibility). Here it is shown that in larvae of Spodoptera exempta (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), in which rearing density triggers the expression of one of two alternative phenotypes, the high-density morph is associated with an increase in larval activity. This response is likely to result in an increase in the contact rate between hosts and pathogens. Rearing density is also known to affect susceptibility of S. exempta to pathogens, with the high-density morph showing increased resistance to a baculovirus. In order to determine whether density-dependent differences observed in the laboratory might affect transmission in the wild, a field trial was carried out to estimate the transmission parameter for S. exempta and its nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV). The transmission parameter was found to be significantly higher among larvae reared in isolation than among those reared in crowds. Models of insect–pathogen interactions, in which the transmission parameter is assumed to be constant, will therefore not fully describe the S. exempta-NPV system. The finding that crowding can influence transmission in this way has major implications for both the long-term population dynamics and the invasion dynamics of insect–pathogen systems.

AB - In models of insect–pathogen interactions, the transmission parameter (ν) is the term that describes the efficiency with which pathogens are transmitted between hosts. There are two components to the transmission parameter, namely the rate at which the host encounters pathogens (contact rate) and the rate at which contact between host and pathogen results in infection (host susceptibility). Here it is shown that in larvae of Spodoptera exempta (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), in which rearing density triggers the expression of one of two alternative phenotypes, the high-density morph is associated with an increase in larval activity. This response is likely to result in an increase in the contact rate between hosts and pathogens. Rearing density is also known to affect susceptibility of S. exempta to pathogens, with the high-density morph showing increased resistance to a baculovirus. In order to determine whether density-dependent differences observed in the laboratory might affect transmission in the wild, a field trial was carried out to estimate the transmission parameter for S. exempta and its nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV). The transmission parameter was found to be significantly higher among larvae reared in isolation than among those reared in crowds. Models of insect–pathogen interactions, in which the transmission parameter is assumed to be constant, will therefore not fully describe the S. exempta-NPV system. The finding that crowding can influence transmission in this way has major implications for both the long-term population dynamics and the invasion dynamics of insect–pathogen systems.

KW - Transmission - Mass action assumption - Phase polyphenism - Spodoptera exempta - Baculoviruses

U2 - 10.1007/s004420000397

DO - 10.1007/s004420000397

M3 - Journal article

VL - 124

SP - 373

EP - 380

JO - Oecologia

JF - Oecologia

SN - 0029-8549

IS - 3

ER -