Abstract

Pathogens can modify many aspects of host behavior or physiology with cascading impacts across trophic levels in terrestrial food webs. These changes include thermal tolerance of hosts, however the effects of fungal infections on thermal tolerances and behavioral responses to extreme temperatures (ET) across trophic levels have rarely been studied. We examined how a fungal pathogen, Beauveria bassiana, affects upper and lower thermal tolerance, and behavior of an herbivorous insect, Acyrthosiphon pisum, and its predator beetle, Hippodamia convergens. We compared changes in thermal tolerance limits (CTMin and CTMax), thermal boldness (voluntary exposure to ET), energetic cost (ATP) posed by each response (thermal tolerance and boldness) between healthy insects and insects infected with two fungal loads. Fungal infection reduced CTMax of both aphids and beetles, as well as CTMin of beetles. Fungal infection modified the tendency, or boldness, of aphids and predator beetles to cross either warm or cold ET zones (ETZ). ATP levels increased with pathogen infection in both insect species, and the highest ATP levels were found in individuals that crossed cold ETZ. Fungal infection narrowed the thermal tolerance range and inhibited thermal boldness behaviors to cross ET. As environmental temperatures rise, response to thermal stress will be asymmetric among members of a food web at different trophic levels, which may have implications for predator–prey interactions, food web structures, and species distributions.

Highlights

  • Pathogens can modify many aspects of host behavior or physiology with cascading impacts across trophic levels in terrestrial food webs

  • 47% of infected beetles with a low fungal load crossed through the warm ET zones (ETZ), 30% crossed through the cold ETZ, and 21% did not perform any cross

  • Most beetles infected with the high fungal dose did not cross any ETZ (65.5%), whereas 22.6% crossed the warm ETZ and only 12% crossed through the cold ETZ

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Summary

Introduction

Pathogens can modify many aspects of host behavior or physiology with cascading impacts across trophic levels in terrestrial food webs These changes include thermal tolerance of hosts, the effects of fungal infections on thermal tolerances and behavioral responses to extreme temperatures (ET) across trophic levels have rarely been studied. Pathogen-induced exposure to temperatures bordering thermal limits (extreme temperatures, ET hereafter) may reduce insect immune response, increasing infection s­ usceptibility[9]. Under this framework, the effects of ET on insects and their pathogens seem poorly understood, regarding the impact of fungal pathogens on thermal ­behavior[10]. Pathogen-infected insects can induce behavioral fever by selecting temperatures found throughout the thermal landscape, selecting temperatures higher than the maximum limit pose acute constraints to organismal f­unction[22]

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