Huntley John Warren, Fürsich Franz T, Alberti Matthias, Hethke Manja, Liu Chunlian
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211;
Fachgruppe PaläoUmwelt, GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, 91054 Erlangen, Germany;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 23;111(51):18150-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1416747111. Epub 2014 Dec 8.
Increasing global temperature and sea-level rise have led to concern about expansions in the distribution and prevalence of complex-lifecycle parasites (CLPs). Indeed, numerous environmental variables can influence the infectivity and reproductive output of many pathogens. Digenean trematodes are CLPs with intermediate invertebrate and definitive vertebrate hosts. Global warming and sea level rise may affect these hosts to varying degrees, and the effect of increasing temperature on parasite prevalence has proven to be nonlinear and difficult to predict. Projecting the response of parasites to anthropogenic climate change is vital for human health, and a longer term perspective (10(4) y) offered by the subfossil record is necessary to complement the experimental and historical approaches of shorter temporal duration (10(-1) to 10(3) y). We demonstrate, using a high-resolution 9,600-y record of trematode parasite traces in bivalve hosts from the Holocene Pearl River Delta, that prevalence was significantly higher during the earliest stages of sea level rise, significantly lower during the maximum transgression, and statistically indistinguishable in the other stages of sea-level rise and delta progradation. This stratigraphic paleobiological pattern represents the only long-term high-resolution record of pathogen response to global change, is consistent with fossil and recent data from other marine basins, and is instructive regarding the future of disease. We predict an increase in trematode prevalence concurrent with anthropogenic warming and marine transgression, with negative implications for estuarine macrobenthos, marine fisheries, and human health.
全球气温上升和海平面上升引发了人们对复杂生命周期寄生虫(CLPs)分布范围扩大和流行率上升的担忧。事实上,众多环境变量会影响许多病原体的传染性和繁殖产出。复殖吸虫是具有中间无脊椎动物宿主和终末脊椎动物宿主的复杂生命周期寄生虫。全球变暖和海平面上升可能会对这些宿主产生不同程度的影响,而且温度升高对寄生虫流行率的影响已被证明是非线性的,难以预测。预测寄生虫对人为气候变化的反应对人类健康至关重要,亚化石记录提供的更长期视角(10⁴年)对于补充较短时间跨度(10⁻¹至10³年)的实验和历史研究方法是必要的。我们利用全新世珠江三角洲双壳类宿主中吸虫寄生虫痕迹的高分辨率9600年记录表明,在海平面上升的最早阶段流行率显著更高,在最大海侵期间显著更低,而在海平面上升和三角洲进积的其他阶段在统计学上无显著差异。这种地层古生物学模式代表了病原体对全球变化反应的唯一长期高分辨率记录,与其他海洋盆地的化石和近期数据一致,且对疾病的未来具有指导意义。我们预测吸虫流行率将随着人为变暖和海侵而增加,这对河口大型底栖生物、海洋渔业和人类健康具有负面影响。