Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida.
Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Mar;25(3):927-937. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14489. Epub 2018 Nov 28.
Climate change might drive species declines by altering species interactions, such as host-parasite interactions. However, few studies have combined experiments, field data, and historical climate records to provide evidence that an interaction between climate change and disease caused any host declines. A recently proposed hypothesis, the thermal mismatch hypothesis, could identify host species that are vulnerable to disease under climate change because it predicts that cool- and warm-adapted hosts should be vulnerable to disease at unusually warm and cool temperatures, respectively. Here, we conduct experiments on Atelopus zeteki, a critically endangered, captively bred frog that prefers relatively cool temperatures, and show that frogs have high pathogen loads and high mortality rates only when exposed to a combination of the pathogenic chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) and high temperatures, as predicted by the thermal mismatch hypothesis. Further, we tested various hypotheses to explain recent declines experienced by species in the amphibian genus Atelopus that are thought to be associated with B. dendrobatidis and reveal that these declines are best explained by the thermal mismatch hypothesis. As in our experiments, only the combination of rapid increases in temperature and infectious disease could account for the patterns of declines, especially in species adapted to relatively cool environments. After combining experiments on declining hosts with spatiotemporal patterns in the field, our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that widespread species declines, including possible extinctions, have been driven by an interaction between increasing temperatures and infectious disease. Moreover, our findings suggest that hosts adapted to relatively cool conditions will be most vulnerable to the combination of increases in mean temperature and emerging infectious diseases.
气候变化可能通过改变物种相互作用,如宿主-寄生虫相互作用,导致物种减少。然而,很少有研究将实验、实地数据和历史气候记录结合起来,提供证据表明气候变化和疾病之间的相互作用导致了任何宿主减少。最近提出的一个假设,即热不匹配假说,可以识别出在气候变化下易受疾病影响的宿主物种,因为它预测,冷适应和暖适应的宿主分别应该容易受到异常温暖和寒冷温度下的疾病的影响。在这里,我们对 Atelopus zeteki 进行了实验,这是一种濒临灭绝的、人工饲养的青蛙,它更喜欢相对凉爽的温度,并表明当青蛙暴露于致病性真菌(Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis)和高温的组合中时,它们的病原体负荷和死亡率都很高,这正如热不匹配假说所预测的那样。此外,我们测试了各种假设来解释 Atelopus 属的物种最近的衰退,这些物种被认为与 B. dendrobatidis 有关,并揭示出这些衰退最好用热不匹配假说来解释。与我们的实验一样,只有温度快速升高和传染病的组合才能解释衰退模式,特别是在适应相对凉爽环境的物种中。在将对衰退宿主的实验与实地的时空模式相结合后,我们的发现与以下假设一致,即包括可能灭绝在内的广泛物种减少是由温度升高和传染病之间的相互作用驱动的。此外,我们的研究结果表明,适应相对凉爽条件的宿主将最容易受到平均温度升高和新发传染病的组合的影响。