Parasites and sex

Update Item Information
Publication Type Book Chapter
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Seger, Jon
Other Author Hamilton, W. D.
Title Parasites and sex
Date 1988
Description Parasites of many kinds have long been recognized as important regulators of population size (e.g., May, 1983b), but only during the last decade or two have they been widely viewed as the protagonists in fast-paced (and long-running) evolutionary thrillers involving subtle features of the biochemistry, anatomy, and behavior of their hosts. On this view, their power as agents of evolution derives from their ubiquity and from the great amounts of mortality they can cause (which are also the properties that make them effective agents of population regulation) and, just as importantly, from their imperfect (but improvable) abilities to defeat the imperfect (but improvable) defenses of their hosts. Thus each party is expected to experience the other as a changeable (and generally worsening) part of its environment.
Type Text
Publisher Sinauer Associates, Inc., Publishers
First Page 176
Last Page 193
Subject Cost of sex
Subject LCSH Sex; Evolution; Parasites; Parasites -- Evolution; Host-parasite relationships -- Genetic aspects
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Seger, J., & Hamilton, W. D.(1988). Parasites and sex, in The Evolution of Sex: an Examination of Current Ideas, ed. by Richard E. Michod and Bruce R. Levin, 176-93.
Rights Management (c)Seger, J., & Hamilton, W. D.
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 1,910,784 bytes
Identifier ir-main,6080
ARK ark:/87278/s60v8x44
Setname ir_uspace
ID 704569
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s60v8x44
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