Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Department of Biology, Aquatic Biology, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
Oecologia. 2020 Dec;194(4):745-755. doi: 10.1007/s00442-020-04800-y. Epub 2020 Nov 10.
Climate change-related increases in temperature will influence the interactions between organisms, including the infection dynamics of parasites in ecosystems. The distribution and transmission of parasites are expected to increase with warmer temperature, but to what extent this will affect closely related parasite taxa living in sympatry is currently impossible to predict, due to our extremely limited understanding of the interspecific variation in transmission potential among parasite species in changing ecosystems. Here, we analyse the transmission patterns of four trematode species from the New Zealand mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum with different life cycles and transmission strategies under two temperature scenarios, simulating current and future warmer temperatures. In a comparative experimental study, we investigated the effects of temperature on the productivity, movement and survival of the parasites' transmission stages (cercariae) to quantify the net effect of temperature on their overall transmission potential. Our results show that increases in temperature positively affect cercarial transmission dynamics, yet these impacts varied considerably between the cercariae of different trematode species, depending on their host-searching behaviour. These different species-specific transmission abilities as well as the varying individual patterns of productivity, activity and longevity are likely to have far-reaching implications for disease dynamics in changing ecosystems, since increases in temperature can shift parasite community structure. Due to the parasites' capacity to regulate the functioning of whole ecological communities and their potential impact as disease agents, understanding these species-specific parasite transmission traits remains a fundamental requirement to predict parasite dynamics under changing environmental conditions.
气候变化引起的温度升高将影响生物之间的相互作用,包括生态系统中寄生虫的感染动态。预计寄生虫的分布和传播会随着温度升高而增加,但由于我们对变化的生态系统中寄生虫物种间传播潜力的种间变异的理解极其有限,目前尚无法预测这种情况会在多大程度上影响生活在同域的密切相关的寄生虫分类群。在这里,我们分析了来自新西兰泥螺 Potamopyrgus antipodarum 的四种吸虫的传播模式,这些吸虫具有不同的生命周期和传播策略,在两种温度情景下,模拟了当前和未来更温暖的温度。在一项比较实验研究中,我们研究了温度对寄生虫传播阶段(尾蚴)的生产力、运动和存活的影响,以量化温度对其整体传播潜力的净效应。我们的结果表明,温度升高对尾蚴的传播动态有积极影响,但不同吸虫的尾蚴之间存在显著差异,这取决于它们的宿主搜索行为。这些不同的物种特异性传播能力以及生产力、活性和寿命的个体模式变化很可能对变化的生态系统中的疾病动态产生深远影响,因为温度升高会改变寄生虫群落结构。由于寄生虫有能力调节整个生态群落的功能,并且它们作为疾病因子的潜在影响,了解这些特定于物种的寄生虫传播特征仍然是预测环境变化下寄生虫动态的基本要求。