Abstract

Geographic variation in aridity determines environmental productivity patterns, including large-scale variability in pathogens, vectors and associated diseases. If disease risk decreases with increasing aridity and is matched by immune defense, we predict a decrease in innate immune function along a gradient of increasing aridity from the cool-wet forest to the hot-dry Sahel, from south to north in Nigeria. We sampled blood and measured five innate immune indices from 286 Common Bulbuls Pycnonotus barbatus between 6 and 13°N. We sampled in the dry season; we resampled the first location (Jos) also as the last sample location to test temporal change in immune function. Immune indices did not decrease with aridity. One immune index, nitric oxide concentration showed a weak quadratic pattern. In Jos, ovotransferrin concentration, haemagglutination and haemolysis titres increased 12 weeks into the dry season, contrary to expectations that immune indices should decrease with increased dryness. In this tropical system, innate immune function does not decrease with increasing aridity but temporal factors within a location may influence immune function more strongly than spatial variation in aridity, suggesting that immune variation does not follow a simple environmental productivity pattern. Consequently, caution should probably be exercised in predicting effects of climate variability on immune function or disease risk.

Highlights

  • Geographic variation in aridity determines environmental productivity patterns, including large-scale variability in pathogens, vectors and associated diseases

  • Such investigations are important for understanding whether immune investment and infection risk influence habitat use in tropical systems and how the life histories of tropical animals may be affected by climate and land use changes[22]

  • The heterogeneity of environmental conditions in tropical systems allows for a test of predicted global patterns of immune variation in accordance with the expected variation in disease risk[3]

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Summary

Introduction

Geographic variation in aridity determines environmental productivity patterns, including large-scale variability in pathogens, vectors and associated diseases. Because higher environmental productivity is associated with the prevalence of infectious agents, including www.nature.com/scientificreports bacteria, fungi and vector and water-borne parasites[47,48], immune indices should decrease with increasing aridity.

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