Abstract

Fever is an evolutionarily conserved and effective organismal response used to reduce infection burden. Although ectotherms are unable to induce a fever endogenously because they only produce negligible heat from their metabolism, they can increase their body temperature in response to infection by selecting warm microclimates (“behavioral fever”). For amphibians, behavioral fever is hypothesized to be critical in their defense against pathogens because many amphibian immune parameters are more effective at warm temperatures. We explored this topic using the pathogenic amphibian chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis; “Bd”), a fungal pathogen implicated in the worldwide amphibian declines. Behavioral fever in amphibians should be an effective defense against Bd because fungal growth is temperature dependent and does not survive above 30°C. We conducted a laboratory experiment in which we allowed Bd-infected and sham inoculated metamorphic American toads (Anaxyrus americanus) to behaviorally thermo...

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