Published August 31, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Alternate patterns of temperature variation bring about very different disease outcomes at different mean temperatures

  • 1. Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg
  • 2. Trinity College Dublin

Description

The dynamics of host-parasite interactions are highly temperature-dependent and may be modified by increasing frequency and intensity of climate-driven heat events. Here, we show that altered patterns of temperature variance lead to an almost order-of-magnitude shift in thermal performance of host and pathogen life history traits over and above the effects of mean temperature and, moreover, that different temperature regimes affect these traits differently. We found that diurnal fluctuations of ±3°C lowered infection rates and reduced spore burden compared to constant temperatures in our focal host Daphnia magna exposed to the microsporidium parasite Ordospora colligata. In contrast, a three-day heatwave (+6°C) did not affect infection rates, but increased spore burden (relative to constant temperatures with the same mean) at 16°C, while reducing burden at higher temperatures. We conclude that changing patterns of climate variation, superimposed on shifts in mean temperatures due to global warming, may have profound and unanticipated effects on disease dynamics.

Notes

MeanTempTreatments.csv: mean temperature of the different treatments, calculated from temperature logger data that can be found in all_raw_temperatures_hobo.csv.

            meanTemp: mean temperature over the duration of the experiment.

treatment: treatment information, either constant, pulse (or heatwave) or fluctuation corresponding to the used temperature regimes in the experiment.

SporesNoMaleNA.csv: observations on infection status and spore burden

no: unique sample number from 1 to 516.

treatment: the temperature regime used, abbreviations, CS = constant, PULSE = heat wave, FLU = fluctuating.

exposed: exposure to the parasite, U = unexposed (control), I = exposed.

temperature: target temperature (10, 13, 16, 19, 22, 25 and 28).  Note: for fluctuating regime this is the lower temperature.

meantemp: mean temperature, different from target temperature for fluctuation regime which alternates been the target temperature and 6℃ higher.

realtemp: measured mean temperature over the experimental period provided by temperature loggers see MeanTempTreatments.csv.

replicate: replicate number from 1 to 18.

death: date of death (last day 08/05/2019)

lastday: was the animal alive the last day of the experiment? Either 0 (dead) or 1 (alive). Used for spore analysis.

infect: infection status, either 0 (no parasite) or 1 (infected).

no_spore: number of spores observed in the dissected Daphnia gut.

size: size of the Daphnia measured under the binocular (for the real size this value

must be transformed by the magnification factor). Not used for the paper and is correlated with fecundity.

comment: gives additional information about the Daphnia during their live span.

sum_daphnia_noNA.csv: Daphnia data,

no: unique sample number from 1 to 516.

treat: the temperature regime used, abbreviations, CS = constant, PULSE = heat wave, FLU = fluctuating.

inf: exposure to the parasite, U = unexposed (control), I = exposed.

mean_temp: measured mean temperature over the experimental period provided by temperature loggers see MeanTempTreatments.csv.

temp: target temperature (10, 13, 16, 19, 22, 25 and 28)

treatment_id: unique treatment ID comprised of Infection status, temperature, treatment, replicate number

repl: replicate number from 1 to 18.

sum: sum of offspring produced over the experimental period.

Files

MeanTempTreatments.csv

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