1. Climate change has the potential to shape the future of infectious diseases, both directly and indirectly. In aquatic systems, for example, elevated temperatures can modulate the infectivity of waterborne parasites and affect the immune response of zooplanktonic hosts. Moreover, lake warming causes shifts in the communities of primary producers towards cyanobacterial dominance, thus lowering the quality of zooplankton diet. This may further affect host fitness, resulting in suboptimal resources available for parasite growth. 2. Previous experimental studies have demonstrated the respective effects of temperature and host diet on infection outcomes, using the zooplankter Daphnia and its microparasites as model systems. Although cyanobacte...
1. Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced str...
Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced stress...
DOI:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1684:WDNHTM]2.0.CO;2© Ecological Society of AmericaEcologists and epid...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
1. Thermal ecology theory predicts that transmission of infectious diseases should respond unimodall...
1. Thermal ecology theory predicts that transmission of infectious diseases should respond unimodall...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
Seasonal epidemics erupt commonly in nature and are driven by numerous mechanisms. Here, we suggest ...
Seasonal epidemics erupt commonly in nature and are driven by numerous mechanisms. Here, we suggest ...
Climate change is expected to favour infectious diseases across ecosystems worldwide. In freshwater ...
© 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Environmental conditio...
Temperature is expected to modulate the responses of organisms to stress. Here, we aimed to assess t...
1. We describe the dynamics of host-parasite interactions over a period of more than 30 years betwee...
Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced stress...
1. Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced str...
Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced stress...
DOI:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1684:WDNHTM]2.0.CO;2© Ecological Society of AmericaEcologists and epid...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
1. Thermal ecology theory predicts that transmission of infectious diseases should respond unimodall...
1. Thermal ecology theory predicts that transmission of infectious diseases should respond unimodall...
Climatic warming will likely have idiosyncratic impacts on infectious diseases, causing some to incr...
Seasonal epidemics erupt commonly in nature and are driven by numerous mechanisms. Here, we suggest ...
Seasonal epidemics erupt commonly in nature and are driven by numerous mechanisms. Here, we suggest ...
Climate change is expected to favour infectious diseases across ecosystems worldwide. In freshwater ...
© 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Environmental conditio...
Temperature is expected to modulate the responses of organisms to stress. Here, we aimed to assess t...
1. We describe the dynamics of host-parasite interactions over a period of more than 30 years betwee...
Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced stress...
1. Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced str...
Global warming challenges the persistence of local populations, not only through heat-induced stress...
DOI:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1684:WDNHTM]2.0.CO;2© Ecological Society of AmericaEcologists and epid...