Why do some parasites kill the host they depend upon while   others coexist with their host? Two prime factors determine parasitic   virulence: the manner in which the parasite is transmitted, and the   evolutionary history of the parasite and its host.   Parasites which  have colonized a new host species tend to be more virulent than  parasites which have coevolved with their hosts. Parasites which are  transmitted horizontally tend to be more virulent than those  transmitted vertically. It has been assumed that parasite-host  interactions inevitably evolve toward lower virulence. This is  contradicted by studies in which virulence is conserved or increases  over time. A model which encompasses the variability of parasite-host  interactions by synthesizing spatial (transmission) and temporal  (evolutionary) factors is examined. Lenski and May (1994) and Antia et  al. (1993) predict the modulation of virulence in parasite-host  systems by integrating evolutionary and transmissibility factors. INTRODUCTION        Why do certain parasites exhibit high levels of virulence within  their host populations while others exhibit low virulence? The two  prime factors most frequently cited (Esch and Fernandez 1993, Toft et  al. 1991) are evolutionary history and mode of transmission.  Incongruently evolved parasite-host associations are characterized by  high virulence, while congruent evolution may result in reduced  virulence (Toft et al. 1991). Parasites transmitted vertically (from  parent to offspring) tend to be less virulent than parasites  transmitted horizontally (between unrelated individuals of the same or  different species). Studies in which virulence is shown to increase  during parasite-host interaction, as in Ebert's (1994) experiment with  Daphnia magna, necessitate a synthesis of traditionally discrete  factors to predict a coevolutionary outcome. Authors prone to  habitually use the word decrease before the word virulence...