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The role of microbes in shaping host reproductive traits: when host-parasite interactions and sexual selection meet

Oliver Otti1
1 University of Bayreuth

P 1.1 in From Cradle to Reality: Research Ideas at the Beginning

Reproduction and immunity are among the most important aspects of life, but their interaction, “reproductive immunity”, has received relatively little interest. Both fields have been studied intensively, but largely separately. Some previous studies have looked at reproduction influencing the immune system and its responses to mating. However, the complementary question “how does pathogen transfer during copulation, and resultant immune activation, affect reproduction” has rarely been asked, yet is likely to yield highly valuable information about both host-parasite interactions and the interaction between the sexes. The damage inherent in copulation is likely to increase infection risk and activate the immune system, altering the reproductive output and the playground not only for natural selection, but also for sexual selection. Microbes entering hosts via copulation pose further selection pressure on the processes in action during reproduction. Therefore, I am interested in the important question:

 

How do sexually transmitted opportunistic microbes shape reproductive traits of hosts?

 

I intend to combine the study of sexual conflict and reproductive immunity by studying the microbial community of host organisms and their impact on the coevolution between the sexes. More precisely I aim to link sexual selection with host-parasite interactions by investigating the effect of microbes on reproductive traits directly and via immunity.

last modified 2013-09-23