Riley N. Jaye
5 Papers
2 Citations
Riley N. Jaye is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Temperature modifies trait-mediated infection outcomes in a Daphnia-fungal parasite system
TL;DR: It is found that elevated temperatures altered the physical barrier and immune responses to parasites during the initial infection process, and that infected hosts at elevated temperatures suffered a greater reduction of fecundity and lifespan.
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Transgenerational plasticity alters parasite fitness in changing environments
TL;DR: Transgenerational plasticity of parasites in response to temperature changes is demonstrated, with fitness impacts that are dependent on both past and current environments.
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Phylogeny, morphology, virulence, ecology, and host range of Ordospora pajunii (Ordosporidae), a microsporidian symbiont of Daphnia spp
Marcin Krzysztof Dziuba,Kristina M. McIntire,Kensuke Seto,Elizabeth S. Davenport,Mary Alta Rogalski,Camden D. Gowler,Emma Baird,Riley N. Jaye,Fiona Corcoran,Alicia Withrow,Steven R. Ahrendt,Asaf Salamov,Matt Nolan,Kerrie Barry,Igor V. Grigoriev,Timothy Y. James,Meghan A. Duffy +16 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a newly discovered microsporidian symbiont of Daphnia was found to shift from parasitism towards mutualism, but little was known about this endosymbiont.
Microsporidian coinfection reduces fitness of a fungal pathogen due to rapid host mortality
Marcin Krzysztof Dziuba,Kristina M. McIntire,Elizabeth S. Davenport,Emma Baird,Cristian Huerta,Riley N. Jaye,Fiona Corcoran,Paige McCreadie,Taleah Nelson,Meghan A. Duffy +9 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the interaction between co-occurring symbionts – and the net impact of a symbiont on a host – might be qualitatively different at different scales, and that the outcome of (co-)infection can be negative or positive depending on the focal organization level.
Transgenerational plasticity in a zooplankton in response to elevated temperature and parasitism
TL;DR: In this paper , the effects of biotic and abiotic environmental changes on within and transgenerational plasticity using a Daphnia-Metschnikowia zooplankton-fungal parasite system were investigated.