Parasitic sex ratio distorters were artificially transferred within
and between crustacean host species in order to study the
effects of parasitism on host fitness and sex determination and to
investigate parasite–host specificity. Implantation of
Nosema sp. to uninfected strains of its Gammarus duebeni
host resulted in an active parasite infection in the gonad of
recipient females and subsequent transovarial parasite transmission. The
young of artificially infected females were
feminized by the parasite, demonstrating that Nosema sp. is a
cause of sex ratio distortion in its host. In contrast, we were
unable to cross-infect Armadillidium vulgare with the
feminizing microsporidian from G. duebeni or to cross-infect
G. duebeni with the feminizing bacterium Wolbachia sp.
from A. vulgare.