hostbiology

Main

Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

Assorted References

  • coevolution ( in community ecology: Parasite-host interactions )

    Parasites and their hosts engage in a similar evolutionary arms race, although in the past parasitologists believed this not to be the case. Instead, parasites were thought to evolve gradually toward reduced antagonism—having a less detrimental effect on their hosts. The degree of virulence was sometimes regarded as an indicator of the age of the relationship: a very virulent...

  • disease ( in disease: Host-parasite relationships )

    Communicable, or contagious, diseases are those transmitted from one organism to another; infectious diseases are diseases caused in the host by infection with living, and therefore replicating, microorganisms such as animal parasites, bacteria, fungi, or viruses. Practically, these two classes of disease are the same, because infectious diseases generally are communicable, or transmissible,...

    in disease: Prevention )

    When infection is spread less directly, through the agency of living vectors or inanimate vehicles, it is often possible to break one or more of the links connecting the susceptible host with the source of infection. Malaria can be controlled effectively by the elimination of the mosquito vector, and louse-borne typhus in humans can be regulated by disinfestation methods. Similarly, diseases...

    in human disease: Predisposition of the host )

    Up to this point, diseases caused by biotic agents have been considered in terms of the role of the invader. Equally important is the role of the host, the individual who contracts the disease. Any infectious disease is a test between the invader and the defender. Virulent organisms may be capable of inducing serious illness even in the most robust. The converse is perhaps more important. The...

  • parasitism ( in community ecology: Types of parasites )

    ...include pathogenic fungi and bacteria, plants that tap into the stems or roots of other plants, insects that as larvae feed on a single plant, and parasitic wasps. Parasites live in or on a single host throughout either a stage in their lives or their entire life span, thereby decreasing the survival or reproduction of their hosts. This lifestyle has arisen many times throughout evolution. The...

  • virology ( in virus )

    ...models had to be developed to study and classify them. The study of viruses confined exclusively or largely to humans, however, posed the formidable problem of finding a susceptible animal host. In 1933 the British investigators Wilson Smith, Christopher H. Andrewes, and Patrick P. Laidlaw were able to transmit influenza to ferrets, and the influenza virus was subsequently adapted to...

    in virus: Treatment )

    ...at the sites of viral infection affords the best results, although injections of large amounts of interferons can be harmful, probably because they tend to inhibit protein synthesis in the host cell.

Citations

MLA Style:

"host." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 09 Jan. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/272666/host>.

APA Style:

host. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 09, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/272666/host

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