Derived from
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22402256 EVOLUTIONARY PARASITOLOGY
in Ecosystems Biodiversity and Management LM-6 (professor to define)
(syllabus)
Cultural skills (Knowledge of:) The course offers the students a new perspective in the study of parasitology, by means of an ecological- evolutionary and comparative approach. In contrast to the traditional emphasis on pathogeniticy for non-human animal and human hosts, this course offers the student the opportunity to deepen the intimate and intricate nature of the association between host and parasite as an adaptive strategy of the parasitic life-style, giving emphasis to the impact of parasitism on the community structure or else to the role of a parasite in the trophic energy transfer in the community. Host is considered as a key element in the parasite environment and, as such, a selective pressure. Methodological skills (Knowing how to perform:) acquire the critical thinking through readings and discussions, in order to correctly evaluate a research hypothesis, choose research tools and interpret results
SYLLABUS
1. Symbiotic interactions (phoresy, commensalism, exploitation, mutualism). Parasitism: definitions. Exploitation and trophic interactions: distinct adaptive strategies (predator/prey, parasitoid/prey, micropredators, parasite/host). Kinds of parasites: endo- and ecto-parasites, micro- and macro-parasites, obligate and facultative parasites, hyperparasites. Kinds of hosts: definitive and intermediate hosts, vectors, paratenic (transport) hosts, reservoire hosts. Mechanisms of invasion, evasion, and survival, transmission strategies. Protozoa and main Metazoan parasites: Platyhelminthes, Nematoda, Acanthocephala, Pentastomida, Arthropoda; parasitism in other metazoan 2. Evolutionary parasitology. Origins of parasitism and transition to parasitism from a free-living ancestral life-style; resistance against the host's defense mechanisms and evolution of host specificity; complex life-cycles shaped by historical events and selective pressures; hosts as part of parasite environment and as a source of selective pressure. Host manipulation by parasites (e.g. behavioral alterations in parasitized hosts). Development of resistance, tolerance and life-history parameters in host species. Host-parasite coevolution: an evolutionary arms race and the “Red-queen” hypothesis.
(reference books)
RECOMMENDED TEXTBOOKS: - Parasitism: The Ecology and Evolution of Intimate Interactions, Claude Combes, 2004, University of Chicago Press (ISBN: 9780226114460) - Evolutionary Ecology of Parasites, (Second Edition), Robert Poulin, 2006, Princeton University Press (ISBN: 9780691120850) - Parasitism: The Diversity and Ecology of Animal Parasites, Albert O. Bush, Jacqueline Fernández, Gerald W. Esch, J. Richard Seed, 2001, Cambridge University Press (ISBN-13: 978-0521664479) - Atlante di parassitologia, Frank Werner; Lieder Johannes, 2002, Franco Muzzio Editore (collana Scienze naturali), 3° edizione (ISBN: 978887413029)
All textbooks can be found in the library
The professor receives every day from 9.00 to 10.00 by appointment via email: monica.carosi@uniroma3.it
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