Climate Change: 2001
Publications
Author: Marcogliese,
D.J.
Title:
Implications of climate change for parasitism of animals in the aquatic environment.
Publication: Canadian
Journal of Zoology 79(8): 1331-1352, 2001.
© National Research Council Canada
Notes : Climate
change can occur over evolutionary and ecological time scales as a result
of natural and anthropogenic causes. Considerable attention has been focused
in recent years on the biological consequences of global warming. However,
aside from studies on those deleterious parasites that cause disease in man,
little effort has been dedicated to understanding the potential changes in
the parasite fauna of animal populations, especially those in aquatic systems.
Predictions using General Circulation Models, among others, are examined in
terms of their consequences for parasite populations in freshwater and marine
ecosystems, concentrating on the temperate and boreal regions of eastern North
America. Biological effects due to global warming are not predictable simply
in terms of temperature response. It is also essential to explore the effects
on aquatic parasites of alterations in host distribution, water levels, eutrophication,
stratification, ice cover, acidification, oceanic currents, ultraviolet-light
penetration, weather extremes, and human interference. Evaluation of the potential
response of parasites of aquatic organisms to climate change illustrates the
complexity of host-parasite systems and the difficulty of making accurate
predictions for biological systems. Parasites in aquatic systems will respond
directly to changes in temperature but also indirectly to changes in other
abiotic parameters that are mediated indirectly through changes in the distribution
and abundance of their hosts. Local extirpations and introductions may be
expected as a result. In the long term, climatic change may influence selection
of different life-history traits, affecting parasite transmission and, potentially,
virulence.
|