Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2013 Nov;19(11):3291-305. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12303. Epub 2013 Sep 11.
Climate change is expected to alter the dynamics of host-parasite systems globally. One key element in developing predictive models for these impacts is the life cycle of the parasite. It is, for example, commonly assumed that parasites with an indirect life cycle would be more sensitive to changing environmental conditions than parasites with a direct life cycle due to the greater chance that at least one of their obligate host species will go extinct. Here, we challenge this notion by contrasting parasitic nematodes with a direct life cycle against those with an indirect life cycle. Specifically, we suggest that behavioral thermoregulation by the intermediate host may buffer the larvae of indirectly transmitted parasites against temperature extremes, and hence climate warming. We term this the 'shelter effect'. Formalizing each life cycle in a comprehensive model reveals a fitness advantage for the direct life cycle over the indirect life cycle at low temperatures, but the shelter effect reverses this advantage at high temperatures. When examined for seasonal environments, the models suggest that climate warming may in some regions create a temporal niche in mid-summer that excludes parasites with a direct life cycle, but allows parasites with an indirect life cycle to persist. These patterns are amplified if parasite larvae are able to manipulate their intermediate host to increase ingestion probability by definite hosts. Furthermore, our results suggest that exploiting the benefits of host sheltering may have aided the evolution of indirect life cycles. Our modeling framework utilizes the Metabolic Theory of Ecology to synthesize the complexities of host behavioral thermoregulation and its impacts on various temperature-dependent parasite life history components in a single measure of fitness, R0 . It allows quantitative predictions of climate change impacts, and is easily generalized to many host-parasite systems.
气候变化预计会改变全球范围内的宿主-寄生虫系统动态。在为这些影响开发预测模型时,寄生虫的生命周期是一个关键因素。例如,通常认为具有间接生命周期的寄生虫比具有直接生命周期的寄生虫对环境变化更为敏感,因为它们的至少一个必需宿主物种灭绝的可能性更大。在这里,我们通过对比具有直接生命周期的寄生线虫和具有间接生命周期的寄生虫来挑战这一观点。具体来说,我们认为中间宿主的行为体温调节可能会缓冲间接传播寄生虫的幼虫免受极端温度的影响,从而减缓气候变暖。我们将这种现象称为“庇护效应”。在一个全面的模型中形式化每个生命周期,揭示了直接生命周期相对于间接生命周期在低温下的适应性优势,但庇护效应在高温下反转了这种优势。当针对季节性环境进行检查时,这些模型表明,在某些地区,气候变暖可能会在仲夏创造一个暂时的小生境,排除具有直接生命周期的寄生虫,但允许具有间接生命周期的寄生虫持续存在。如果寄生虫幼虫能够操纵它们的中间宿主以增加被确定宿主的摄入概率,那么这些模式会被放大。此外,我们的研究结果表明,利用宿主庇护的好处可能有助于间接生命周期的进化。我们的建模框架利用代谢生态学理论,将宿主行为体温调节的复杂性及其对各种与温度相关的寄生虫生活史成分的影响综合在一个单一的适应性指标 R0 中。它允许对气候变化影响进行定量预测,并且易于推广到许多宿主-寄生虫系统。