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Wolbachia, Cardinium and climate: an analysis of global data.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Charlesworth, J 
Weinert, LA 
Araujo, EV 
Welch, JJ 

Abstract

Bacterial endosymbionts are very common in terrestrial arthropods, but infection levels vary widely among populations. Experiments and within-species comparisons suggest that environmental temperature might be important in explaining this variation. To investigate the importance of temperature, at broad geographical and taxonomic scales, we extended a global database of terrestrial arthropods screened for Wolbachia and Cardinium. Our final dataset contained data from more than 117 000 arthropods (over 2500 species) screened for Wolbachia and more than 18 000 arthropods (over 800 species) screened for Cardinium, including samples from 137 different countries, with mean temperatures varying from -6.5 to 29.2°C. In insects and relatives, Cardinium infection showed a clear and consistent tendency to increase with temperature. For Wolbachia, a tendency to increase with temperature in temperate climates is counteracted by reduced prevalence in the tropics, resulting in a weak negative trend overall. We discuss the implications of these results for natural and introduced symbionts in regions affected by climate change.

Description

Keywords

Köppen climates, beta-binomial modelling, biogeography, endosymbiosis, Animals, Arthropods, Bacteroidetes, Insecta, Symbiosis, Wolbachia

Journal Title

Biol Lett

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1744-9561
1744-957X

Volume Title

15

Publisher

The Royal Society

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (109385/Z/15/Z)