Abstract

Global warming has important implications for the dynamics and ecological impacts of emerging diseases. We investigated temperature effects on scuticociliate, Orchitophrya cf . stellarum, infections in ripe testes of two Pacific northeast sea stars ( Asterina miniata Brandt and Pisaster ochraceus Brandt) using laboratory and field approaches. We predicted that a small increase in temperature would result in higher ciliate growth rates and heightened infection intensities. To test this we (1) cultured free-living O. stellarum at 10 and 15 °C and quantified ciliate abundance after 3 days, and (2) housed sea stars of both species at 10 and 15 °C for durations varying from 4 to 21 days and then measured the infection intensity. Ciliate densities in cultures were two orders of magnitude higher in the warmer treatment. Infection intensity was also temperature sensitive: greater proportions of testes were infected and infection stage was more advanced at 15 versus 10 °C, leading to a reduction in spermatozoa and regression of the germinal layer within three weeks. In seven field populations surveyed, we found a tight linear correlation between infection prevalence (percent infected sea stars) and infection intensity (proportion of infected testes per individual and mean infection score). However, 45% of P. ochraceus testes exhibited heavy infections versus 8% of A. miniata testes, which may relate to the different thermal habitat of each species: P. ochraceus occurs higher on the shore and likely reaches higher body temperatures at low tide. While the sex ratio of A. miniata is unbiased, P. ochraceus populations are consistently female-biased and show no relationship to infection prevalence (ranged from 30 to 90%). O. cf . stellarum infections of testes of both sea stars are prevalent in field populations, are highly temperature sensitive, and lead to rapid loss of reproductive potential.

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