Rajarajan Amruta, Cerbin Sławek, Beng Kingsly C, Monaghan Michael T, Wolinska Justyna
Department of Evolutionary and Integrative Ecology, Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB), Müggelseedamm 301, 12587, Berlin, Germany.
Department of General Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland.
Environ Microbiome. 2025 Jun 20;20(1):76. doi: 10.1186/s40793-025-00724-3.
Anthropogenic activities have led to a global rise in water temperatures, prompting increased interest in how warming affects infectious disease ecology. While most studies have focused on individual host-parasite systems, there is a gap in understanding the impact of warming on multi-host, multi-parasite assemblages in natural ecosystems. To address this gap, we investigated freshwater eukaryotic parasite communities in ten natural lakes near Konin, Poland: five artificially heated and five non-heated "control" lakes. Since 1958, the heated lakes have experienced a mean annual temperature increase of 2 °C due to hot water discharge from two adjacent power plants. We collected seasonal environmental DNA (eDNA) samples from surface waters over a two-year period and applied targeted metabarcoding to compare the richness and distribution of eukaryotic parasites across lake types with a focus on protists and fungi.
Using literature searches and sequence metadata from GenBank, we identified putative parasites which included Alveolates, Stramenopiles, basal Fungi and Ichthyosporeans as well as their associated hosts. Heated lakes harboured distinct parasite assemblages with higher richness of chytrids and aphelids, suggesting thermal preferences among certain freshwater microeukaryotic parasites. Other groups exhibited clear seasonal trends with richness of oomycetes peaking in spring and summer, and that of Cryptomycota in winter and autumn. A general linear model revealed a marginally positive correlation between chytrid parasite richness and richness of their green algal, diatom, and dinoflagellate hosts. Post-hoc analyses indicated that heated lakes exhibited greater seasonal variation in chytrid parasite richness and a stronger correlation between host and parasite richness than control lakes.
These findings demonstrate that warming can induce strong shifts in the richness and assemblages of freshwater microeukaryotic parasites. Using chytrids as a focal group, we additionally demonstrate that warming may amplify seasonal variation in parasite richness and strengthen host-parasite richness relationships.
人为活动导致全球水温上升,这引发了人们对气候变暖如何影响传染病生态学的兴趣日益浓厚。虽然大多数研究都集中在单个宿主 - 寄生虫系统上,但在理解气候变暖对自然生态系统中多宿主、多寄生虫组合的影响方面仍存在空白。为了填补这一空白,我们调查了波兰科宁附近十个天然湖泊中的淡水真核寄生虫群落:五个人工加热湖泊和五个未加热的“对照”湖泊。自1958年以来,由于两座相邻发电厂排放热水,这些加热湖泊的年平均温度上升了2°C。我们在两年时间内从地表水采集了季节性环境DNA(eDNA)样本,并应用靶向宏条形码技术来比较不同湖泊类型中真核寄生虫的丰富度和分布,重点关注原生生物和真菌。
通过文献检索和来自GenBank的序列元数据,我们鉴定出了推定的寄生虫,包括囊泡虫、不等鞭毛虫、基础真菌和鱼孢菌以及它们的相关宿主。加热湖泊中寄生的独特寄生虫组合,壶菌和无尾鞭毛菌的丰富度更高,这表明某些淡水微真核寄生虫具有热偏好。其他类群呈现出明显的季节性趋势,卵菌的丰富度在春季和夏季达到峰值,而隐真菌门在冬季和秋季达到峰值。一个一般线性模型显示,壶菌寄生虫丰富度与其绿藻、硅藻和甲藻宿主的丰富度之间存在微弱的正相关。事后分析表明,与对照湖泊相比,加热湖泊中壶菌寄生虫丰富度的季节性变化更大,宿主和寄生虫丰富度之间的相关性更强。
这些发现表明,气候变暖可导致淡水微真核寄生虫的丰富度和组合发生强烈变化。以壶菌为重点研究对象,我们还证明,气候变暖可能会放大寄生虫丰富度的季节性变化,并加强宿主 - 寄生虫丰富度之间的关系。