MORAND, Serge, Andrea ŠIMKOVÁ, Iveta MATĚJUSOVÁ, Laetitia PLAISANCE, Olivier VERNEAU and Yves DESDEVISES. Investigating patterns may reveal precesses: evolutionary ecology of monogeneans. International Journal for Parasitology. Australia: Elsevier, 2002, vol. 32, No 2, p. 111-119. ISSN 0020-7519. |
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@article{484486, author = {Morand, Serge and Šimková, Andrea and Matějusová, Iveta and Plaisance, Laetitia and Verneau, Olivier and Desdevises, Yves}, article_location = {Australia}, article_number = {2}, keywords = {Monogenea; communities; interspecific competition; host-parasite coevolutionary interaction}, language = {eng}, issn = {0020-7519}, journal = {International Journal for Parasitology}, title = {Investigating patterns may reveal precesses: evolutionary ecology of monogeneans}, volume = {32}, year = {2002} }
TY - JOUR ID - 484486 AU - Morand, Serge - Šimková, Andrea - Matějusová, Iveta - Plaisance, Laetitia - Verneau, Olivier - Desdevises, Yves PY - 2002 TI - Investigating patterns may reveal precesses: evolutionary ecology of monogeneans JF - International Journal for Parasitology VL - 32 IS - 2 SP - 111-119 EP - 111-119 PB - Elsevier SN - 00207519 KW - Monogenea KW - communities KW - interspecific competition KW - host-parasite coevolutionary interaction N2 - We reviewed several published and ongoing studies concerning monogenean communities. Patterns of species richness, host specificity, community structure and host-parasite coevolutionary interaction were carefully analysed, and hypotheses of evolutionary processes are proposed. The structuring of monogenean communities seems to be related to both ecological and historical constraints. The database supports an absence of intra- and interspecific competition in monogeneans. Species richness seems to be more due to host characteristics than to parasite interactions. Monogeneans seem to specialise on large hosts, leading to greater species richness on those hosts. The morphometric evolution of attachment and copulatory organs support the hypothesis of a reproductive segregation among conspecifics parasitising the same host(s). It also suggests the existence of concurrent adaptive and non-adaptive processes. The general absence of a coevolutionary pattern between host and parasites also suggests the constraints of history without dismissing the influences of ecological factors in the structuring of the communities. More generally, we strengthen the need to study the structure of communities in a phylogenetic context. ER -
MORAND, Serge, Andrea ŠIMKOVÁ, Iveta MATĚJUSOVÁ, Laetitia PLAISANCE, Olivier VERNEAU and Yves DESDEVISES. Investigating patterns may reveal precesses: evolutionary ecology of monogeneans. \textit{International Journal for Parasitology}. Australia: Elsevier, 2002, vol.~32, No~2, p.~111-119. ISSN~0020-7519.
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