Department of Integrative Biology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Tampa, Tampa, FL, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2019 May;22(5):817-825. doi: 10.1111/ele.13239. Epub 2019 Feb 28.
Global climate change is increasing the frequency of unpredictable weather conditions; however, it remains unclear how species-level and geographic factors, including body size and latitude, moderate impacts of unusually warm or cool temperatures on disease. Because larger and lower-latitude hosts generally have slower acclimation times than smaller and higher-latitude hosts, we hypothesised that their disease susceptibility increases under 'thermal mismatches' or differences between baseline climate and the temperature during surveying for disease. Here, we examined how thermal mismatches interact with body size, life stage, habitat, latitude, elevation, phylogeny and International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) conservation status to predict infection prevalence of the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) in a global analysis of 32 291 amphibian hosts. As hypothesised, we found that the susceptibility of larger hosts and hosts from lower latitudes to Bd was influenced by thermal mismatches. Furthermore, hosts of conservation concern were more susceptible than others following thermal mismatches, suggesting that thermal mismatches might have contributed to recent amphibian declines.
全球气候变化正在增加不可预测天气条件的发生频率;然而,物种水平和地理因素(包括体型和纬度)如何调节异常温暖或凉爽温度对疾病的影响仍不清楚。由于较大和较低纬度的宿主通常比较小和较高纬度的宿主具有更慢的适应时间,因此我们假设在“热不匹配”或基线气候与疾病调查期间的温度之间存在差异的情况下,它们的疾病易感性会增加。在这里,我们通过全球范围内对 32291 个两栖动物宿主的分析,检查了热不匹配如何与体型、生活阶段、栖息地、纬度、海拔、系统发育和国际自然保护联盟(IUCN)保护状况相互作用,以预测真菌巴氏梭菌(Bd)的感染流行率。正如假设的那样,我们发现,较大体型的宿主和较低纬度的宿主对 Bd 的易感性受到热不匹配的影响。此外,在热不匹配之后,受到保护关注的宿主比其他宿主更容易受到影响,这表明热不匹配可能导致了最近的两栖动物数量下降。