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Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK
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Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Parasitism and Disease

Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK

Page 2: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Evolution of Host-Parasite Interactions

Page 3: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

European rabbits as pests in Australia - 1938

Page 4: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Introduced pests in Australia – red fox, rabbit, cat, pig, & goat

Page 5: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 6: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 7: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Parasite effect on host population

Parasite can cause direct mortality but then can only persist in a large host population

Usually parasite lowers host reproduction, growth or survival - often this effect is indirect by way of

1) lowers host stamina - more subject to predation, competition

2) increases conspicuousness - predation risk increases

3) disorient host via neurological damage

4) alters host response to environmental stimuli

Page 8: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Fungal parasites alter insect behavior

Giant ant w/o and with fungus

Page 9: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Moose and White-tailed Deer

Page 10: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Deer – Moose brain worm interaction

Page 11: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 12: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 13: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Avian malaria occurs in areas below white line on Island of Hawaii – highest incidence

between yellow and white lines

Page 14: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Hawaiian Crow – Extinct in Wild

Page 15: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

I’iwi Honeycreeper – highly susceptible to avian malaria

Page 16: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Akiapolaau Honeycreeper – restricted to high elevation today

Page 17: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Amakihi Honeycreeper – shows evidence of evolving resistance

Page 18: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Sir Robert May Roy Anderson

Page 19: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Spread of HIV in Russia

Page 20: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Dynamics of parasite populations

Most important parameter is basic reproductive rate of the parasite, symbolized Rp

Rp will:

1) increase with increasing density of susceptible hosts - N

2) increase with increasing transmission rate beta β

3) increase with increasing fraction of infected hosts that survive long enough to be infectious to other hosts - symbolized by f

4) increase with increasing average time that host remains infectious - symbolized by L

Page 21: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Dynamics of parasite populations

• We can also examine the reproductive rate of infection (Ri) = average number of secondary cases of infection generated by one primary case in a population where almost everyone is susceptible to infection

• Ri > 1 each infection has more than one "offspring" - chain reaction of epidemic

• Ri < 1 infection cannot sustain itself

Page 22: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 23: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 24: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 25: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

Incidence of HIV in Africa

Page 26: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.
Page 27: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.

You’re never too old to need protection

Page 28: Parasitism and Disease Lyme Disease Cycle in the UK.