Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity. Temperature is one of the most important factors influencing host-fungus associations but the effects of temperature variability on disease development are rarely examined. The chytrid pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) has had severe effects on populations of hundreds of rainforest-endemic amphibian species but we know little about the effects of rainforest-specific host body temperature cycles on infection patterns. To address this challenge, we used body temperature regimes experienced in nature by frogs in the Australian Wet Tropics to guide a controlled experiment investigating the effects of body temperature f...
Rates of growth and reproduction of the pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases can be aff...
Dramatic declines and extinctions of amphibian populations throughout the world have been associated...
This dataset contains data from a laboratory experiment described in the paper: Siddons, S. R., and ...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity. Tempera...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity. Tempera...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity and temp...
Ectotherm body temperatures fluctuate with environmental variability and host behavior, which may in...
The ability of wildlife populations to mount rapid responses to novel pathogens will be critical for...
Host behavior can interact with environmental context to influence outcomes of pathogen exposure and...
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) is a fungal pathogen causing amphibian population declines. Bd ...
While epizootics increasingly affect wildlife, it remains poorly understood how the environment shap...
1. The course and outcome of many wildlife diseases are context-dependent, and therefore change depe...
<div><p>Rates of growth and reproduction of the pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases ca...
Defense against pathogens is one of many benefits that bacteria provide to animal hosts. A clearer u...
The ability of wildlife populations to mount rapid responses to novel pathogens will be critical for...
Rates of growth and reproduction of the pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases can be aff...
Dramatic declines and extinctions of amphibian populations throughout the world have been associated...
This dataset contains data from a laboratory experiment described in the paper: Siddons, S. R., and ...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity. Tempera...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity. Tempera...
Recent emergences of fungal diseases have caused catastrophic global losses of biodiversity and temp...
Ectotherm body temperatures fluctuate with environmental variability and host behavior, which may in...
The ability of wildlife populations to mount rapid responses to novel pathogens will be critical for...
Host behavior can interact with environmental context to influence outcomes of pathogen exposure and...
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) is a fungal pathogen causing amphibian population declines. Bd ...
While epizootics increasingly affect wildlife, it remains poorly understood how the environment shap...
1. The course and outcome of many wildlife diseases are context-dependent, and therefore change depe...
<div><p>Rates of growth and reproduction of the pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases ca...
Defense against pathogens is one of many benefits that bacteria provide to animal hosts. A clearer u...
The ability of wildlife populations to mount rapid responses to novel pathogens will be critical for...
Rates of growth and reproduction of the pathogens that cause emerging infectious diseases can be aff...
Dramatic declines and extinctions of amphibian populations throughout the world have been associated...
This dataset contains data from a laboratory experiment described in the paper: Siddons, S. R., and ...