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Article 5

Beyond the paradigms of cospeciation and host-switch: is sympatric speciation an important mode of speciation for parasites?

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S. MORAND1*, A. ŠIMKOVÁ2, S. GOURBIÈRE3
1 Université Montpellier 2-CNRS, Institut des Sciences de l’Evolution, CC065, 34095 Montpellier cedex 05, France.
2 Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, 611 37 Brno, Czech Republic
3 Laboratoire de Mathématique Physique et Systèmes (EA 4217), Université de Perpignan, Via Domitia, 52 avenue Paul Alduy, 66860 Perpignan cedex, France
* Corresponding author: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Abstract. – The great majority of studies on host-parasite associations, either theoretical or empirical, have focused on cospeciation and host-switch minimizing the importance of sympatric speciation, a mode of speciation that can be also defined as intra-host speciation. Sympatric speciation is considered when a single host species is infested by a monophyletic parasite lineage. The parasite speciates without a corresponding host cospeciation event and this leads to two or more lineages of parasites on single host species. A recent study illustrates how the diversification of Dactylogyrus spp. parasitizing cyprinid fish meets the four conditions required to recognize a case of sympatric speciation, according to Coyne (2007). However, inferring mode of speciation does not help to depict the mechanism of sympatric/intra-host speciation and theoretical model of speciation can be useful to investigate the conditions of sympatric speciation in parasites, as it has been already done for free-living organisms. Finally we aim at highlighting that diversification of parasites through intra-host speciation is maybe a prevalent mode of speciation in parasites, as the numerous number of parasite species flocks suggest, and that parasites are also good models for investigating the mechanisms of sympatric speciation.

You are here: Volume 58 (2008) Issue 2 Article 5
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