Temperature Affects the Biological Control of Dinoflagellates by the Generalist Parasitoid Parvilucifera rostrata

Schmitt, Matthew; Telusma, Aaron; Bigeard, Estelle; Guillou, Laure; Alves-de-Souza, Catharina

Abstract

The increase in emerging harmful algal blooms in the last decades has led to an extensive concern in understanding the mechanisms behind these events. In this paper, we assessed the growth of two blooming dinoflagellates (Alexandrium minutum and Heterocapsa triquetra) and their susceptibility to infection by the generalist parasitoid Parvilucifera rostrata under a temperature gradient. The growth of the two dinoflagellates differed across a range of temperatures representative of the Penze Estuary (13 to 22 degrees C) in early summer. A. minutum growth increased across this range and was the highest at 19 and 22 degrees C, whereas H. triquetra growth was maximal at intermediate temperatures (15-18 degrees C). Interestingly, the effect of temperature on the parasitoid infectivity changed depending on which host dinoflagellate was infected with the dinoflagellate responses to temperature following a positive trend in A. minutum (higher infections at 20-22 degrees C) and a unimodal trend in H. triquetra (higher infections at 18 degrees C). Low temperatures negatively affected parasitoid infections in both hosts (i.e., "thermal refuge"). These results demonstrate how temperature shifts may not only affect bloom development in microalgal species but also their control by parasitoids.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000824146300004 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: MICROORGANISMS
Volumen: 10
Número: 2
Editorial: MDPI
Fecha de publicación: 2022
DOI:

10.3390/microorganisms10020385

Notas: ISI