Aquatic eutrophication promotes pathogenic infection in amphibians
Top Cited Papers
- 2 October 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (40) , 15781-15786
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0707763104
Abstract
The widespread emergence of human and wildlife diseases has challenged ecologists to understand how large-scale agents of environmental change affect host–pathogen interactions. Accelerated eutrophication of aquatic ecosystems owing to nitrogen and phosphorus enrichment is a pervasive form of environmental change that has been implicated in the emergence of diseases through direct and indirect pathways. We provide experimental evidence linking eutrophication and disease in a multihost parasite system. The trematode parasite Ribeiroia ondatrae sequentially infects birds, snails, and amphibian larvae, frequently causing severe limb deformities and mortality. Eutrophication has been implicated in the emergence of this parasite, but definitive evidence, as well as a mechanistic understanding, have been lacking until now. We show that the effects of eutrophication cascade through the parasite life cycle to promote algal production, the density of snail hosts, and, ultimately, the intensity of infection in amphibians. Infection also negatively affected the survival of developing amphibians. Mechanistically, eutrophication promoted amphibian disease through two distinctive pathways: by increasing the density of infected snail hosts and by enhancing per-snail production of infectious parasites. Given forecasted increases in global eutrophication, amphibian extinctions, and similarities between Ribeiroia and important human and wildlife pathogens, our results have broad epidemiological and ecological significance.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Parasites dominate food web linksProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Schistosomiasis and water resources development: systematic review, meta-analysis, and estimates of people at riskThe Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2006
- Status and Trends of Amphibian Declines and Extinctions WorldwideScience, 2004
- HOST STARVATION DECREASES PARASITE LOAD AND MEAN HOST SIZE IN EXPERIMENTAL POPULATIONSEcology, 2004
- How should environmental stress affect the population dynamics of disease?Ecology Letters, 2003
- Human health effects of a changing global nitrogen cycleFrontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2003
- Strong and weak trophic cascades along a productivity gradientOikos, 2003
- Environmental microbe and human pathogen: the ecology and microbiology of Vibrio choleraeFrontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2003
- Patterns and consequences of behavioural responses to predators and parasites in Rana tadpolesBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2000