Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Parasites typically have broader thermal limits than hosts, so large performance gaps between pathogens and their cold- and warm-adapted hosts should occur at relatively warm and cold temperatures, respectively. We tested this thermal mismatch hypothesis by quantifying the temperature-dependent susceptibility of cold- and warm-adapted amphibian species to the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) using laboratory experiments and field prevalence estimates from 15 410 individuals in 598 populations. In both the laboratory and field, we found that the greatest susceptibility of cold- and warm-adapted hosts occurred at relatively warm and cool temperatures, respectively, providing support for the thermal mismatch hypothesis. Our results suggest that as climate change shifts hosts away from their optimal temperatures, the probability of increased host susceptibility to infectious disease might increase, but the effect will depend on the host species and the direction of the climate shift. Our findings help explain the tremendous variation in species responses to Bd across climates and spatial, temporal and species-level variation in disease outbreaks associated with extreme weather events that are becoming more common with climate change.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ele.12720DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

thermal mismatch
12
mismatch hypothesis
12
cold- warm-adapted
12
host susceptibility
8
infectious disease
8
warm-adapted hosts
8
susceptibility cold-
8
climate change
8
thermal
4
hypothesis explains
4

Similar Publications

Membrane technology for gas separation is more efficient and energy-saving than thermally driven processes, including cryogenic distillation and adsorption. Metal-organic framework (MOF) and related glass membranes hold great potential for precise gas separation, but it remains challenging to construct ultrathin MOF glass membranes and optimize their transport pathways. In this study, a strategy based on vapor-linker deposition and melt-quenching is reported to design ultrathin zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) glass membranes with node-missing defect passageways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Stretch-activated morphing enabled by integrated physical-chemical network engineering.

Mater Horiz

September 2025

College of Polymer Science and Engineering, Sichuan University, State Key Laboratory of Advanced Polymer Materials, Chengdu, 610065, Sichuan, China.

Mechanical stimuli-responsive shape transformations, exemplified by mimosa leaves, are widespread in nature, yet remain challenging to realize through facile fabrication in synthetic morphing materials. Herein, we demonstrate stretch-activated shape-morphing enabled by an elastic-plastic bilayer structure assembled dynamic crosslinking. Through dioxaborolane metathesis, a dynamic, crosslinked polyolefin elastomer (POEV) with elasticity and a co-crosslinked POE/paraffin wax blend (POE/PW-V) with tunable plasticity are prepared.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

High-entropy metal phosphide nanoparticles for accelerated lithium polysulfide conversion.

Chem Sci

September 2025

School of Resources, Environment and Materials, Guangxi Key Laboratory of Processing for Non-ferrous Metals and Featured Materials, Guangxi University Nanning 530004 P. R. China

To overcome the persistent challenges of sluggish lithium polysulfide (LiPS) conversion kinetics and the shuttle effect in Li-S batteries, this work introduces a novel, cost-effective thermal treatment strategy for synthesizing high-entropy metal phosphide catalysts using cation-bonded phosphate resins. For the first time, we successfully fabricated single-phase high-entropy FeCoNiCuMnP nanoparticles anchored on a porous carbon network (HEP/C). HEP/C demonstrates enhanced electronic conductivity and superior LiPS adsorption capability, substantially accelerating its redox kinetics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Design of Cu/Zr Alloy Interface for Enhanced Thermal Fatigue Performance in Electronic Packaging.

ACS Omega

September 2025

Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, AFRL/RXEE, Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio 45433, United States.

This study addresses a critical limitation in direct bonded copper (DBC) materials used in power electronics by introducing a copper-zirconium (Cu/Zr) alloy interposing layer at the copper-ceramic interface. This novel design aims to mitigate mechanical stress induced by mismatched material properties, such as the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) and elastic modulus, during thermal cycling. The key findings of this study are (1) thermal fatigue improvement: Test samples with the Cu/Zr interface layer (Cu-Cu/Zr-AlN) three times enhanced thermal fatigue resistance, surviving 30 thermal cycles from -55 to 300 °C before delamination, while standard DBC substrates without the Cu/Zr layer failed after just 10 cycles, indicating a performance improvement with the Cu/Zr alloy, (2) durability projections: Based on the Coffin-Manson model, if the upper temperature is capped at 150 °C, the Cu-Cu/Zr-AlN substrates are projected to survive approximately 1372 cycles, underscoring their potential for long-term reliability, and (3) stress mitigation: The Cu/Zr alloy layer bridges the CTE disparity between copper and ceramic, reducing mechanical stress and improving structural integrity across a broad temperature range (-55 to 300 °C).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

DNA is polymorphic, as with four nucleobases, it can be configured in a number of secondary structures. The four-stranded DNA structures consisting of G-tetrads have especially been intriguing because of their proven existence in human cells. Due to the high prevalence of putative G-quadruplex-forming sequence motifs in the human genome, scientists in recent years have highlighted the potential of exploiting these exotic structures for targeted therapies for various cancers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF