91. Will, I.*, Stevens, E.J.*, Belcher, T., King, K.C. 2024. ‘Re-wilding’ an animal model with microbiota shifts immunity and stress gene expression during infection. Molecular Ecology. Accepted.
90. Cai, T., Nadal Jimenez, P., Gao, Y., Arai, H., Li, C., Su, C., King, K.C., He, S., Li, J., Hurst, G.D.D., Wan, H. 2024. Insecticide susceptibility in a planthopper pest increases following inoculation with cultured Arsenophonus. The ISME Journal. Accepted.
89. Greenrod, S.T.E., Hector, T.E., Blazanin, M., Cazares, D., King, K.C. 2024. Temperature as a driver of phage ecology and evolution. Annual Reviews of Microbiology. Invited.
87. Li, J.D., Smith, C., Chen, J., Bates, K.A., King, K.C. 2024. Warming during different life stages has distinct impacts on host resistance ecology and evolution. Authorea rxiv.
86. Tan, Y.Y., Chang, W.H., Katsoulis, M., Cox. M., Dexanas, S., King, K.C., Cox, M., Davie, C., Balloux, F., Lai, A.G. 2024. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare use among patients with cancer in England, UK: a comprehensive phase-by-phase time-series analysis across attendance types for 38 cancers. Lancet Digital Health6, e691-e704.
85. Li, J.D., Guttman, N., Drew, G.C., Hector, T.E., Wolinska, J., King, K.C. 2024. Excess mortality of infected ectotherms induced by warming depends on pathogen kingdom and evolutionary history. PLoS Biology. In press.
84. Siozios, S., Nadal-Jimenez, P., Azagi, T., Sprong, H., Frost, C.L., Parratt, S.R., Taylor, G., Brettell, L., Liew, K.C., Croft, L., King, K.C., Brockhurst, M.A., Hypša, V., Novakova, E., Darby, A.C., Hurst, G.D.D. 2024. Genome dynamics across the evolutionary transition to endosymbiosis. Current Biology. Published online.
83. Chen, M.Y., Fulton, L., Huang, I., Liman, A., Hossain, S., Hamilton, C., Song, S., Geissmann, Q., King, K.C., Haney, C.H. 2024. Order among chaos: high throughput MYCroplanters can distinguish interacting drivers of host infection in a highly stochastic system. bioRxiv.
82. Silva, L.M., King, K.C., Koella, J. 2024. Dissecting transmission to understand parasite evolution. EcoevoRxiv.
81. Greenrod, S.T.E., Stevens, E.J., Hector, T.E., Johnson, S., MacLean, R.C., King, K.C. 2024. Warming alters life history traits and competition in a phage community. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 0: e00286-24.
80. Hoang, K.L., Salguero-Gomez, R., Pike, V., King, K.C.2024. The impacts of host association and perturbation on symbiont fitness. Symbiosis.
79. Hoang, K.L., Read, T.,King, K.C. 2024. Incomplete immunity in a natural animal-microbiota system selects for higher pathogen virulence. Current Biology 34, 1357-1363.*
* Related Dispatch: Jarkass, H.T.E., Reinke, A.W. 2024. Pathogen evolution: protective microbes act as a double-edged sword. Current Biology 34, PR247–PR249.
78. Hoang, K.L., Read, T., King, K.C. 2024. Defence heterogeneity in host populations gives rise to pathogen diversity. American Naturalist 204, 370-380.
76.Pike, V.,Stevens, E.J., Griffin, A., King, K.C. 2023. Within- and between-host dynamics of producer and non-producer pathogens. Parasitology 150, 805-812.
75. Hasik, A., King, K.C., Hawlena, H. 2023. Interspecific host competition and parasite virulence evolution. Biology Letters 19.
74. Santiago, I., King, K.C., Drew, G.C. 2023. Interactions between insect vectors and plant pathogens span the parasitism-mutualism continuum. Biology Letters 19.
67.Wu-Chuang, A.,Bates, K.A., Obregon, D., Estrada-Peña, A.,King, K.C.*, Cabezas-Cruz, A.*.2022. Rapid evolution of a novel protective symbiont into keystone taxon in C.elegans microbiota. Scientific Reports 12, 14045.
66. Ordovás-Montañés, M., Preston, G.,Hoang, K.L., Rafaluk-Mohr, C., King, K.C.2022.Trade-offs in defence to pathogen species revealed in expanding nematode populations. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 35, 1002-1011.
65.Hoang, K.L., King, K.C. 2022. Symbiont-mediated immune priming in animals through an evolutionary lens. Microbiology 168.
62. Ordovás-Montañés, M., Preston, G., Drew, G.C., Rafaluk-Mohr, C., King, K.C.2022. Reproductive consequences of transient pathogen exposure across host genotypes and generations. Ecology and Evolution 12, e8720.
61. Drew, G.C.,King, K.C.2022. More or less? The effect of symbiont density in protective mutualisms. American Naturalist 199.
60.Rafaluk-Mohr, C., Gerth, M., Sealey, J., Ekroth, A.K.E., Aboobaker, A.A., Kloock, A., King, K.C.2022. Microbial protection favours parasite tolerance and alters host-parasite coevolutionary dynamics. Current Biology 32, P1593-P1598.*
* Related Dispatch: Brockhurst, M.A. 2022. Host-parasite coevolution: backseat drivers take the wheel at the Red Queen’s race. Current Biology 32, PR316-PR317.
56. Drew, G.C.*, Stevens, E.*, King, K.C. 2021. Microbial evolution and transitions along the parasite-mutualist continuum. Nature Reviews Microbiology 19.
55. Ekroth, A.K.E., Gerth, M., Stevens, E., Ford, S.A., King, K.C. 2021. Host genotype and genetic diversity shape the evolution of a novel bacterial pathogen. The ISME Journal 15, 2146–2157.
54. Marcogliese, D.J., King, K.C., Bates, K.A.2021.Effects of multiple stressors on northern leopard frogs in agricultural wetlands. Parasitology 148, 827-834.
53. Stevens, E., Bates, K.A., King, K.C.2021. Host microbiota can facilitate pathogen infection. PloS Pathogens 17, e1009514.
50. King, K.C., Hurst, G.D.D., Lewis, Z. 2020. Let’s emerge from the pandemic lock-down into a fairer academic world. Current Biology 30, R799.
49. Kloock, A., Bonsall, M.B., King, K.C. 2020. Evolution and maintenance of microbe-mediated protection under occasional pathogen infection. Ecology and Evolution 10, 8634-8642.
48. Dahan, D., Preston, G., Sealey, J., King, K.C. 2020. The impact of a novel defensive symbiosis on the nematode host microbiome. BMC Microbiology 20, 159.
47. King, K.C., Stevens, E., Drew, G.C. 2020. Microbiome: evolution in a world of interaction. Current Biology 30, R265-267.
46. Frost, C.L., Siozios, S., Nadal-Jimenez, P., Brockhurst, M., King, K.C., Darby, A., Hurst, G.D.D. 2020. Hypercomplex genome of an insect reproductive parasite highlights the importance of lateral gene transfer in symbiont biology. mBio 11, e02590-19.
44. Pike, V., Ford, S. A., King, K. C., Rafaluk-Mohr, C. 2019. Fecundity compensation is dependent on the host generalised stress response in Caenorhabditis elegans. Ecology and Evolution 9, 11957-11961.
43. Ekroth, A.K.E., Rafaluk-Mohr, C., King, K.C. 2019. Host genetic diversity limits parasite success beyond agricultural systems: a meta-analysis. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 286.
42. Pike, V., Lythgoe, K., King, K.C. 2019. On the diverse and opposing effects of nutrition on pathogen virulence. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 286.
41. Meirmans, S., Butlin, R., Charmantier, A., Engelstaedter, J., Groot, A., King, K.C., Kokko, H., Reid, J., Neiman, M. 2019. Science policies: how should science funding be allocated? An evolutionary biologists perspective. 2019. Journal for Evolutionary Biology 32, 754-768.
30. Tackacs-Vesbach, C., King, K.C., Van Horn, D., Larkin, K., Neiman, M. 2016. Distinct microbiomes in sexual vs. asexual Potamopyrgus antipodarum, a New Zealand freshwater snail. PLoS One 11, e0161050.
29. Parratt, S.R., Frost, C.L., Schenkel, M.A., Rice, A., Hurst, G.D.D.*, King, K.C.* 2016. Superparasitism drives heritable symbiont epidemiology and host sex ratio in a wasp. PLoS Pathogens 12, e1005629.
28. Ford, S.A., King, K.C.2016.Harnessing the power of defensive microbes: evolutionary implications in nature and disease control. PLoS Pathogens 12, e1005465.
27. Vale, P.F., McNally, L., Doeschl-Wilson, A., King, K.C., Popat, R., Domingo-Sananes, M.R., Allen, J.E., Soares, M.P., Kummerli, R. 2016. Beyond killing: can we find new ways to manage infection? Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health 1, eow012.
26. Betts, A., Gifford, D., MacLean, R.C., King, K.C. 2016. Parasite diversity drives rapid host dynamics and evolution of resistance in a bacteria-phage system. Evolution 70, 969-978.
25. King, K.C., Brockhurst, M.A., Vasieva, O., Paterson, S., Betts, A., Ford, S.A., Frost, C.L., Horsburgh, M., Haldenby, S., Hurst, G.D.D. 2016. Rapid evolution of microbe-mediated protection against pathogens in a worm host. The ISME Journal 10, 1915–1924.
23. King, K.C.*, Stelkens, R.*, Webster, J.*, Smith, D., Brockhurst, M.A. 2015. Hybridisation in parasites: consequences for adaptive evolution, pathogenesis, and public health in a changing world. PLoS Pathogens 11, e1005098.
22. Daoust, S., King, K.C., Roitberg, B., Roche, B., Brodeur, J., Thomas, F. 2015. Making the best of a bad situation: host partial resistance and by-pass to behaviour manipulation by parasites? Trends in Parasitology 31, 413-418.
21. Ducasse, H., Arnal, A., Vittecoq, M., Daoust, S.P., Ujvari, B., Jacqueline, C., Ewald, P., Gatenby, R.A., King, K.C., Bonhomme, F., Brodeur, J., Renaud, F., Solary, E., Roche, B., Thomas, F. 2015. Cancer: an emergent property of disturbed resource rich environments? Ecology meets personalized medicine. Evolutionary Applications 8, 527-540.
2014
20. Brockhurst, M.A., Chapman, T., King, K.C., Mank, J., Paterson, S., Hurst, G.D.D. 2014. Running with the Red Queen: role of biotic conflicts in evolution. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 281.
19. Soper, D., King, K.C., Vergara, D., Lively, C.M. 2014. Parasite exposure increases promiscuity in a freshwater snail. Biology Letters 10, 2013191.
2013
18. Vergara, D., Lively, C.M., King, K.C., Jokela, J. 2013. Geographic mosaic of sex and infection in lake populations of a New Zealand snail at multiple spatial scales. American Naturalist 182, 484-493.
17. King, K.C., Auld, S.K.J.R., Wilson, P., James, J., Little, T.J. 2013. The bacterial parasite Pasteuria ramosa is not killed if it fails to infect: implications for coevolution. Ecology and Evolution 3, 197-203.
2012
16. Brockhurst, M.A., King, K.C. 2012. Coevolution. Oxford Bibliographies in Ecology. Eds. Gibson, D. New York: Oxford University Press.
15. King, K.C., Lively, C.M. 2012. Can genetic diversity limit disease spread in host populations? Heredity 109, 199-203.
14. King, K.C., Seppälä, O., Neiman, M. 2012. Is more better? Polyploidy and parasite resistance. Biology Letters 8, 598-600.
13. Leung, T.L.F., King, K.C., Wolinska, J. 2012. Escape from the Red Queen: an overlooked scenario in co-evolutionary studies. Oikos 121, 641-645.
2011
12. King, K.C., Delph, L.F., Jokela, J., Lively, C.M. 2011. Coevolutionary hotspots and coldspots for host sex and parasite local adaptation in a snail-trematode interaction. Oikos 120, 1335-1340.
11. King, K.C., Jokela, J., Lively, C.M. 2011. Parasites, sex, and clonal diversity in natural snail populations. Evolution 65, 1474-1481.
10. King, K.C., Jokela, J., Lively, C.M. 2011. Trematode parasites infect or die in snail hosts. Biology Letters 7, 265-268.
2010
9. King, K.C., Hurst, G.D.D. 2010. Losing the desire: selection can promote obligate asexuality. BMC Biology 8, 101-104.
8. King, K.C., McLaughlin, J.D., Boily, M., Marcogliese, D.J. 2010. Effects of agricultural landscape and pesticides on parasitism in native bullfrogs. Biological Conservation 143, 302-310.
2009
7. King, K.C., Delph, L.F., Jokela, J., Lively, C.M. 2009. The geographic mosaic of sex and the Red Queen. Current Biology 19, 1438-1441.
6. King, K.C., Lively, C.M. 2009. Geographic variation in sterilizing parasite species and the Red Queen. Oikos 118, 1416-1420.