Lien Reyserhove
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Featured researches published by Lien Reyserhove.
Evolutionary Applications | 2018
Shira Houwenhuyse; Emilie Macke; Lien Reyserhove; Lore Bulteel; Ellen Decaestecker
Current natural populations face new interactions because of the re‐emergence of ancient microbes and viruses. These risks come from the re‐emergence of pathogens kept in laboratories or from pathogens that are retained in the permafrost, which become available upon thawing due to climate change. We here focus on the effects of such re‐emergence in natural host populations based on evolutionary theory of virulence and long‐term studies, which investigate host–pathogen adaptations. Pathogens tend to be locally and temporally adapted to their co‐occurring hosts, but when pathogens from a different environment or different time enter the host community, the degree to which a new host–pathogen interaction is a threat will depend on the specific genotypic associations, the time lag between the host and the pathogen, and the interactions with native or recent host and pathogen species. Some insights can be obtained from long‐term studies using a resurrection ecology approach. These long‐term studies based on time‐shift experiments are essential to obtain insight into the mechanisms underlying host–pathogen coevolution at several ecological and temporal scales. As past pathogens and their corresponding host(s) can differ in infectivity and susceptibility, strong reciprocal selective pressures can be induced by the pathogen. These strong selective pressures often result in an escalating arms race, but do not necessarily result in increased infectivity over time. Human health can also be impacted by these resurrected pathogens as the majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonoses, which are infectious diseases originating from animal populations naturally transmitted to humans. The sanitary risk associated with pathogen emergence from different environments (spatial or temporal) depends on a combination of socioeconomic, environmental, and ecological factors that affect the virulence or the pathogenic potential of microbes and their ability to infect susceptible host populations.
Freshwater Biology | 2014
Marlies Coopman; Koenraad Muylaert; Benjamin Lange; Lien Reyserhove; Ellen Decaestecker
Ecology | 2017
Lien Reyserhove; Giovanni Samaey; Koenraad Muylaert; Vincent Coppé; Willem Van Colen; Ellen Decaestecker
Belgian Journal of Zoology | 2017
Lien Reyserhove; Koenraad Muylaert; Isabel Vanoverberghe; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2014
Marlies Coopman; Koenraad Muylaert; Benjamin Lange; Lien Reyserhove; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2014
Marlies Coopman; Koenraad Muylaert; Lien Reyserhove; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2014
Marlies Coopman; Koenraad Muylaert; Silke Van Den Wyngaert; Lien Reyserhove; Isabel Vanoverberghe; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2013
Lien Reyserhove; Thomas Beer; Koenraad Muylaert; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2013
Lien Reyserhove; Willem Van Colen; Koenraad Muylaert; Ellen Decaestecker
Archive | 2013
Marlies Coopman; Koenraad Muylaert; Benjamin Lange; Lien Reyserhove; Ellen Decaestecker