4.6 Article

A perspective on insect-microbe holobionts facing thermal fluctuations in a climate-change context

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 18-29

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15826

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Funding

  1. FSR incoming Post-doctoral Fellowship of the UCLouvain
  2. F.R.S.-FNRS

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Temperature plays a significant role in influencing the ecology and evolution of insect-microbe holobionts, but the current understanding of the impacts of complex thermal fluctuations experienced by these organisms in nature is limited. This lack of knowledge may hinder our ability to predict the effects of climate change on mutualistic interactions.
Temperature influences the ecology and evolution of insects and their symbionts by impacting each partner independently and their interactions, considering the holobiont as a primary unit of selection. There are sound data about the responses of these partnerships to constant temperatures and sporadic thermal stress (mostly heat shock). However, the current understanding of the thermal ecology of insect-microbe holobionts remains patchy because the complex thermal fluctuations (at different spatial and temporal scales) experienced by these organisms in nature have often been overlooked experimentally. This may drastically constrain our ability to predict the fate of mutualistic interactions under climate change, which will alter both mean temperatures and thermal variability. Here, we tackle down these issues by focusing on the effects of temperature fluctuations on the evolutionary ecology of insect-microbe holobionts. We propose potentially worth-investigating research avenues to (i) evaluate the relevance of theoretical concepts used to predict the biological impacts of temperature fluctuations when applied to holobionts; (ii) acknowledge the plastic (behavioural thermoregulation, physiological acclimation) and genetic responses (evolution) expressed by holobionts in fluctuating thermal environments; and (iii) explore the potential impacts of previously unconsidered patterns of temperature fluctuations on the outcomes and the dynamic of these insect-microbe associations.

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