Skip masthead and go to navigation, main content or sidebar.

Penn State shield. Click to visit main Penn State website CIDD, the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics. Click to visit our home page

Search   …this site   …Penn State  

Sandra Lass

Sandra Lass

Postdoctoral Researcher

Email: sandra.lass@psu.edu

Phone: 814-865-8259

Fax: 814-865-9131

Office: 513 Mueller Laboratory

Research

I am interested in the ecology and evolution of interspecific interactions — including host-parasite and predator-prey dynamics. I combine observational and experimental data to quantitatively test predictions of epidemiological and evolutionary theory, answering questions like:


Parasite effects on individual hosts and on host populations

Parasites can have major effects on individual hosts, and hence on host populations; they can be a powerful selective force influencing host evolution. The parasite's ability to drive host evolution is determined by parasite transmission, persistence (prevalence) and detrimental effect on host fitness ( virulence). To date, much of the work in this area is theoretical; validation of theory with empirical data lags behind. I aim to fill this gap by testing predictions from epidemiological and evolutionary theory, using data gathered in laboratory and field settings.

Host-parasite interactions in a community context

A central question in evolutionary ecology is how interactions among organisms shape species' abundance and distribution, as well as their phenotypic and genotypic compositions. Many studies have investigated this question by focusing on interactions between just two species. However, species evolve in a community context, so focusing on pairwise interactions may be over-simplistic. For example, several parasite species can simultaneously infect a single host. I study how micro- and macroparasites that share a host may affect each other, their epidemiology and the ecology of their hosts.

Study systems include

Mice (Peromyscus spp.) and their micro- and macroparasite communities

Waterfleas (Daphnia) and their microparasites

Selected publications

Ebert D, Altermatt F & Lass S (2007) A short-term benefit for outcrossing in a Daphnia metapopulation in relation to parasitism. Journal of the Royal Society Interface 4: 777-785

Lass S & Ebert D (2006) Apparent seasonality in parasite dynamics: Analysis of cyclical prevalence patterns. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 273: 199-206.

Vizoso DB, Lass S & Ebert D (2005) Characteristics of the microsporidium Octosporea bayeri and its routes of transmission. Parasitology 130: 1-11.

Lass S & Bittner K (2002) Facing multiple enemies: parasitised hosts respond to predator kairomones. Oecologia 132: 344-349

» Download my full publication list (50kB pdf)