School of Marine and Tropical Biology and Amphibian Disease Ecology Group, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD 4811, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2013;3:1515. doi: 10.1038/srep01515.
Environmental context strongly affects many host-pathogen interactions, but the underlying causes of these effects at the individual level are usually poorly understood. The amphibian chytrid fungus has caused amphibian population declines and extinctions in many parts of the world. Many amphibian species that have declined or have been extirpated by the pathogen in some environments coexist with it in others. Here we show that in three species of rainforest frogs in nature, individuals' probability of infection by the amphibian chytrid fungus was strongly related to their thermal history. Individuals' probability of infection declined rapidly as they spent more time above the pathogen's upper optimum temperature. This relationship can explain population-level patterns of prevalence in nature, and suggests that natural or artificial selection for higher thermal preferences could reduce susceptibility to this pathogen. Similar individual-level insights could improve our understanding of environmental context-dependence in other diseases.
环境背景强烈影响着许多宿主-病原体的相互作用,但在个体水平上,这些影响的根本原因通常理解得很差。两栖类壶菌已在世界许多地区导致了两栖类种群的减少和灭绝。在某些环境中,由于病原体而减少或灭绝的许多两栖物种与其他环境中的病原体共存。在这里,我们表明,在三种热带雨林蛙中,个体被两栖类壶菌感染的概率与它们的热历史有很强的关系。个体感染的概率随着它们在病原体最佳温度以上的时间增加而迅速下降。这种关系可以解释自然种群中流行率的模式,并表明对较高热偏好的自然或人工选择可能会降低对这种病原体的敏感性。类似的个体水平的见解可以提高我们对其他疾病中环境背景依赖性的理解。