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Journal Article

Short-sighted evolution of virulence in parasitic honeybee workers (Apis mellifera capensis Esch.)

Moritz, Robin F. A.,Pirk, Christian W. W.,Hepburn, H.,Neumann, Peter
Year2008
JournalNaturwissenschaften
Volume95
Keywordsapiaries, Apis, Apis mellifera, Apis mellifera capensis

Abstract

Abstract  The short-sighted selection hypothesis for parasite virulence predicts that winners of within-host competition are poorer at transmission to new hosts. Social parasitism by self-replicating, female-producing workers occurs in the Cape honeybee Apis mellifera capensis, and colonies of other honeybee subspecies are susceptible hosts. We found high within-host virulence but low transmission rates in a clone of social parasitic A. m. capensis workers invading the neighbouring subspecies A. m. scutellata. In contrast, parasitic workers from the endemic range of A. m. capensis showed low within-host virulence but high transmission rates. This suggests a short-sighted selection scenario for the host‚Äìparasite co-evolution in the invasive range of the Cape honeybee, probably facilitated by beekeeping-assisted parasite transmission in apiaries