Decomposing health: tolerance and resistance to parasites in animals
Lund University · Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Plant biologists have long recognized that host defence against parasites and pathogens can be divided into two conceptually different components: the ability to limit parasite burden (resistance) and the ability to limit the harm caused by a given burden (tolerance). Together these two components determine how well a host is protected against the effects of parasitism. This distinction is useful because it recognizes that hosts that are best at controlling parasite burdens are not necessarily the healthiest. Moreover, resistance and tolerance can be expected to have different effects on the epidemiology of infectious diseases and host-parasite coevolution. However, studies of defence in animals have to date…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 91
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Coevolution
- Biology
- Resistance (ecology)
- Parasitism
- Host (biology)
- Host resistance
- Harm
- Parasite hosting
- Good health and well-being