Timing of extreme heat events matters: exposure during parasitism disrupts top-down control
Nicholas A. Pardikes, Tomas A. Revilla, Gregoire Proudhom, Melanie Thierry, Chia-Hua Lue, Jan Hrcek

TL;DR
Extreme heat events during parasitism disrupt the control of host species by parasitoids, with effects depending on the timing of heat exposure.
Contribution
The study reveals that the timing of extreme heat exposure relative to parasitism significantly affects parasitism rates and top-down control.
Findings
Heat exposure during parasitism leads to decreased parasitism rates in tropical Drosophila–parasitoid interactions.
Adult host flies and parasitoids are more resistant to heat exposure than their larval stages.
The effects of heat exposure on parasitism are generally additive and not delayed.
Abstract
Due to ongoing climate change, extreme climatic events are expected to increase in magnitude and frequency. While individual species’ responses to thermal extremes are widely studied, the impact of extreme heat events on species interactions and the key functions they provide in communities is understudied. As outcomes of species interactions depend on coordinated physiology and development, the consequences of heat exposure are likely impacted by its timing relative to the organisms’ life history traits, but to what extent is unclear. In this study, we evaluate how the timing of heat exposure affects interactions among nine tropical Drosophila–parasitoid species combinations using laboratory microcosm experiments. Interactions were most affected when heat exposure coincided with parasitism, leading to decreased parasitism rates. Parasitism rates also dropped when extreme heat occurred…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect-Plant Interactions and Control · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Physiological and biochemical adaptations
