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Contrasting temperature responses in seasonal timing of cercariae shedding by trematodes. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global warming may extend how long parasites release larvae, affecting freshwater mussels and trematodes.
  • Warmer temperatures caused a shift towards earlier release of larvae for both parasite species, yet the total duration of release remained unchanged.
  • Different responses were observed between the trematode species, suggesting that climate impacts on parasite behavior can vary greatly and aren't uniform across all species.

Article Abstract

Global warming is likely to lengthen the seasonal duration of larval release by parasites. We exposed freshwater mussel hosts, , from 2 high-latitude populations to high, intermediate and low temperatures throughout the annual cercarial shedding period of the sympatric trematodes and , sharing the same transmission pathway. At the individual host level, under warmer conditions, the timing of the cercarial release in both parasite species shifted towards seasonally earlier period while its duration did not change. At the host population level, evidence for the lengthening of larvae shedding period with warming was found for . started the cercarial release seasonally clearly earlier, and at a lower temperature, than . Furthermore, the proportion of mussels shedding cercariae increased, while day-degrees required to start the cercariae shedding decreased in high-temperature treatment in . In these effects were not found, suggesting that warming can benefit more . These results do not completely support the view that climate warming would invariably increase the seasonal duration of larval shedding by parasites, but emphasizes species-specific differences in temperature-dependence and in seasonality of cercarial release.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11010493PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0031182022000518DOI Listing

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