| Literature DB >> 30242193 |
Lisa M Clancy1, Rory Jones1, Amy L Cooper1, Gareth W Griffith1, Roger D Santer2.
Abstract
Behavioural fever is a common response to immune challenge in ectotherms and confers survival benefits. However, costs accrue rapidly as body temperature rises. Thus, the magnitude of adaptive fever responses might reflect the balance of costs and benefits. We investigated behavioural fever in desert locusts, Schistocerca gregaria, infected with the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium acridum. We first tracked the time course of behavioural fever in infected locusts, demonstrating that body temperatures rose on the day following inoculation (day 1), and reached peak intensity on the day after that (day 2). Subsequently, the magnitude of fever responses varied during a day, and locusts tended to exhibit high-intensity fever responses in the mornings when basking was first possible. We speculate that this may have resulted from increased fungal load caused by unimpeded growth overnight when locusts could not fever. We next inoculated locusts with different M. acridum doses ranging from 0 to ca. 75,000 conidia. The magnitude of their behavioural fever responses on day 2 post-inoculation was positively related to fungal dose. Thus, we demonstrate dose-dependency in the behavioural fever responses of desert locusts and suggest that this may reflect the adaptive deployment of behavioural fever to minimize costs relative to benefits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30242193 PMCID: PMC6155106 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32524-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The time course of behavioural fever in desert locusts inoculated with Metarhizium acridum. Plots (a,b) show the results of two repeats of the same experiment. In each experiment, the body temperatures of 12 fungus-inoculated (filled circles) and 12 control-treated (open circles) locusts was recorded by infrared thermography at 30-minute intervals during the operation of a thermal gradient. Data points show the mean ± SEM body temperature across the 12 locusts in each treatment group at each sampling point. Clusters of sampling points, therefore, represent subjective days 0 to 6 of the experiment, and intervals between them the subjective nights in which an ambient temperature of 28 °C was maintained. The fever responses of fungus-inoculated locusts were most intense on day 2, 49–61 hours post-inoculation (filled circles). On subsequent days the first sampling points of the day often yielded high mean body temperatures which tended to decline at subsequent measurements.
Figure 2The relationship between fungal dose and the intensity of behavioural fever. Filled and open circles indicate the results of two repeats of the same experiment. In each experiment, cohorts of 12 locusts were inoculated with one of five fungal doses ranging from 0 to ca. 75,000 fungal conidia. For each locust, body temperatures were measured at 14 temperature sampling points on day 2 post-inoculation, and these measurements were averaged to indicate the intensity of fever on that day. Data points show the mean ± SEM body temperature across the 12 locusts in each cohort. Locust body temperatures were significantly linearly related to log10-transformed fungal doses (inset; see results). These significant relationships are plotted for each experiment (solid and dashed lines), against both log10-transformed (inset) and untransformed fungal doses (main figure).