J 2018

Holobiont suture zones: Parasite evidence across the European house mouse hybrid zone

GOÜY DE BELLOCQ, Joëlle, A. RIBAS, Josef BRYJA, Jaroslav PIÁLEK, S.J.E. BAIRD et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Holobiont suture zones: Parasite evidence across the European house mouse hybrid zone

Authors

GOÜY DE BELLOCQ, Joëlle (250 France), A. RIBAS (724 Spain), Josef BRYJA (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Jaroslav PIÁLEK (203 Czech Republic), S.J.E. BAIRD (372 Ireland) and Wasim UDDIN (356 India)

Edition

Molecular Ecology, Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2018, 0962-1083

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

10602 Biology , Evolutionary biology

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 5.855

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14310/18:00106156

Organization unit

Faculty of Science

UT WoS

000454600500018

Keywords in English

hybrid parasites; Mus musculus; Pneumocystis murina; secondary contact hybrid zones; suture zone; Syphacia obvelata

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 23/4/2024 14:14, Mgr. Michal Petr

Abstract

V originále

Parasite hybrid zones resulting from host secondary contact have never been described in nature although parasite hybridization is well known and secondary contact should affect them similarly to free-living organisms. When host populations are isolated, diverge and recontact, intimate parasites (host specific, direct life cycle) carried during isolation will also meet and so may form parasite hybrid zones. If so, we hypothesize these should be narrower than the host's hybrid zone as shorter parasite generation time allows potentially higher divergence. We investigate multilocus genetics of two parasites across the European house mouse hybrid zone. We find each host taxon harbours its own parasite taxa. These also hybridize: Parasite hybrid zones are significantly narrower than the host's. Here, we show a host hybrid zone is a suture zone for a subset of its parasite community and highlight the potential of such systems as windows on the evolutionary processes of host-parasite interactions and recombinant pathogen emergence.