Climate change is expected to affect disease risk in many parasite-host systems, e.g., via an effect of temperature on infectivity (temperature effects). However, recent studies indicate that ambient communities can lower disease risk for hosts, for instance via predation on free-living stages of parasites (predation effect). Since general physiological theory suggests predation effects to be temperature-dependent, we hypothesized that increases in temperature may lead to reduced parasite infectivity via elevated consumption rates of free-living parasite stages (temperature-predation interaction). We experimentally investigated such interactions in three marine predators of infective parasite stages. Two species (the oyster <i>Crassostrea g...
Background Changes in climate are predicted to influence parasite and pathogen infection patterns in...
As climate change progresses, thermal stress is expected to alter the way that host organisms respon...
Global climate change is impacting the emergence, re-emergence, prevalence, and incidence of infecti...
Climate change is expected to affect disease risk in many parasite-host systems, e.g., via an effect...
To predict global warming impacts on parasitism, we should describe the thermal tolerance of all pla...
In the Western Baltic Sea, climate change is happening at much faster rate than in most other seas a...
Global warming can affect the world’s biota and the functioning of ecosystems in many indirect ways....
Parasites and pathogens have significant roles in host population control, and thus host-parasite in...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 23-27)Current debate centers on whether parasite transmis...
Interspecific differences in climate-driven changes to organismal physiology and phenology will alte...
Information on parasites and disease in marine ecosystems lags behind terrestrial systems, increasin...
sulting mainly from atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) build-up, seawater temperature rise is among th...
A moderate raise in temperature was suggested to enhance the impact of parasites on aquatic ecosyste...
1. Changes in the magnitude and frequency of temperature shifts with climate change will influence s...
Research examining the causal relationships between climate, climate change and parasite ecology is ...
Background Changes in climate are predicted to influence parasite and pathogen infection patterns in...
As climate change progresses, thermal stress is expected to alter the way that host organisms respon...
Global climate change is impacting the emergence, re-emergence, prevalence, and incidence of infecti...
Climate change is expected to affect disease risk in many parasite-host systems, e.g., via an effect...
To predict global warming impacts on parasitism, we should describe the thermal tolerance of all pla...
In the Western Baltic Sea, climate change is happening at much faster rate than in most other seas a...
Global warming can affect the world’s biota and the functioning of ecosystems in many indirect ways....
Parasites and pathogens have significant roles in host population control, and thus host-parasite in...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 23-27)Current debate centers on whether parasite transmis...
Interspecific differences in climate-driven changes to organismal physiology and phenology will alte...
Information on parasites and disease in marine ecosystems lags behind terrestrial systems, increasin...
sulting mainly from atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) build-up, seawater temperature rise is among th...
A moderate raise in temperature was suggested to enhance the impact of parasites on aquatic ecosyste...
1. Changes in the magnitude and frequency of temperature shifts with climate change will influence s...
Research examining the causal relationships between climate, climate change and parasite ecology is ...
Background Changes in climate are predicted to influence parasite and pathogen infection patterns in...
As climate change progresses, thermal stress is expected to alter the way that host organisms respon...
Global climate change is impacting the emergence, re-emergence, prevalence, and incidence of infecti...