Am Nat. 2024 Aug;204(2):121-132. doi: 10.1086/730522. Epub 2024 Jun 20.
AbstractClimate change will alter interactions between parasites and their hosts. Warming may affect patterns of local adaptation, shifting the environment to favor the parasite or host and thus changing the prevalence of disease. We assessed local adaptation to hosts and temperature in the facultative ciliate parasite , which infects the western tree hole mosquito . We conducted laboratory infection experiments with mosquito larvae and parasites collected from across a climate gradient, pairing sympatric or allopatric populations across three temperatures that were either matched or mismatched to the source environment. parasites were locally adapted to their hosts, with 2.6 times higher infection rates on sympatric populations compared with allopatric populations, but they were not locally adapted to temperature. Infection peaked at the intermediate temperature of 12.5°C, notably lower than the optimum temperature for free-living growth, suggesting that the host's immune response can play a significant role in mediating the outcome of infection. Our results highlight the importance of host selective pressure on parasites, despite the impact of temperature on infection success.
摘要气候变化将改变寄生虫与其宿主之间的相互作用。变暖可能会影响局部适应模式,使环境有利于寄生虫或宿主,从而改变疾病的流行程度。我们评估了兼性纤毛虫寄生虫对宿主和温度的局部适应能力,该寄生虫感染西部树洞蚊。我们对来自气候梯度的蚊子幼虫和寄生虫进行了实验室感染实验,将同域或异域种群配对到三个与来源环境相匹配或不匹配的温度下。寄生虫对其宿主具有局部适应性,与异域种群相比,同域种群的感染率高 2.6 倍,但它们对温度没有局部适应性。感染在 12.5°C 的中间温度达到峰值,明显低于自由生活的生长的最佳温度,这表明宿主的免疫反应可以在很大程度上影响感染的结果。我们的研究结果强调了宿主对寄生虫的选择压力的重要性,尽管温度对感染成功率有影响。