Warming during different life stages has distinct impacts on host
resistance ecology and evolution
Abstract
Global climate change is causing extreme heating events and intensifying
infectious disease outbreaks. We tested whether warming (at various host
life stages) could shape the ecological and evolutionary trajectory of
host resistance, by competing nematode host genotypes across 10
generations during infection by a natural bacterial pathogen. We found
that persistent warming throughout host development and during infection
strongly favoured genetic-based host resistance. Ambient temperatures or
periodic warming within host lifetime resulted in the loss of
genetic-based resistance, despite pathogen presence. Warming during host
development caused plastic temperature-mediated protection which
weakened selection for more costly resistance. The findings of an
associated mechanistic model suggest that dilution of pathogen cells by
resistant hosts might help protect susceptible individuals when warming
does not occur during development. Host evolutionary trajectories were
likely driven by the combination of fitness constraints on genetic-based
resistance, host plasticity, condition-dependent pathogen virulence, and
dilution effects.