Authors
Stephen J Price, William TM Leung, Christopher J Owen, Robert Puschendorf, Chris Sergeant, Andrew A Cunningham, Francois Balloux, Trenton WJ Garner, Richard A Nichols
Publication date
2019/8
Journal
Global Change Biology
Volume
25
Issue
8
Pages
2648-2660
Description
The global trend of increasing environmental temperatures is often predicted to result in more severe disease epidemics. However, unambiguous evidence that temperature is a driver of epidemics is largely lacking, because it is demanding to demonstrate its role among the complex interactions between hosts, pathogens, and their shared environment. Here, we apply a three‐pronged approach to understand the effects of temperature on ranavirus epidemics in UK common frogs, combining in vitro, in vivo, and field studies. Each approach suggests that higher temperatures drive increasing severity of epidemics. In wild populations, ranavirosis incidents were more frequent and more severe at higher temperatures, and their frequency increased through a period of historic warming in the 1990s. Laboratory experiments using cell culture and whole animal models showed that higher temperature increased ranavirus …
Total citations
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