Coevolution of invasive parasites with old and new host species along a gradient of ancient to recent sympatry


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marieke.feis [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

Biological invasions of parasites and their hosts are ideal to study coevolution in nature. Two closely related copepod parasites have invaded Eastern Atlantic mussels and oysters. Specialist Mytilicola intestinalis have invaded from the Mediterranean Sea and generalist Mytilicola orientalis from the inland sea of Japan. A transcriptomic backbone of these parasites will be generated as a genomic resource. Here we report the first results of these transcriptomic resources and present dN/dS ratios of homologous gens and polymorphism data. We expect to find neutral and selective markers for downstream applications and to find targets of selection. These could explain a parasitic and generalist versus a specialist life style.



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Conference (Poster)
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Published
Event Details
International symposium Ecology and Evolution of Marine Parasites and Diseases, 10 Mar 2013 - 14 Mar 2013, Texel, the Netherlands.
Eprint ID
37495
Cite as
Feis, M. E. and Wegner, K. M. , AWI (2013): Coevolution of invasive parasites with old and new host species along a gradient of ancient to recent sympatry , International symposium Ecology and Evolution of Marine Parasites and Diseases, Texel, the Netherlands, 10 March 2013 - 14 March 2013 .


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