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Dryad

Data from: Virulence and transmission biology of the widespread, ecologically important pathogen of zooplankton, Spirobacillus cienkowskii

Data files

Sep 09, 2024 version files 335.60 KB

Abstract

Spirobacillus cienkowskii (Spirobacillus, hereafter) is a widely distributed bacterial pathogen that has significant impacts on the population dynamics of zooplankton (Daphnia spp.), particularly in months when Daphnia are asexually reproducing. Yet little is known about Spirobacillus’ virulence, transmission mode and dynamics. As a result, we cannot explain the dynamics of Spirobacillus epidemics in nature or use Spirobacillus as a model pathogen, despite Daphnia’s tractability as a model-host. Here, we work to fill these knowledge gaps experimentally. We found that Spirobacillus is among the most virulent of Daphnia pathogens, killing its host within a week and reducing host fecundity. We further found that Spirobacillus did not transmit horizontally among hosts unless the host died or was destroyed (i.e., it is an “obligate killer”). In experiments aimed at quantifying the dynamics of horizontal transmission among asexually reproducing Daphnia, we demonstrated that Spirobacillus transmits poorly in the laboratory. In mesocosms, Spirobacillus failed to generate epidemics; in experiments wherein individual Daphnia were exposed, Spirobacillus’ transmission success was low. In the (limited) set of conditions we considered, Spirobacillus’ transmission success did not change with host density or pathogen dose and declined following environmental incubation. Lastly, we conducted a field survey of Spirobacillus’ prevalence within egg-cases (ephippia) made by sexually reproducing Daphnia. We found Spirobacillus DNA in ∼40% of ephippia, suggesting that, in addition to transmitting horizontally among asexually reproducing DaphniaSpirobacillus may transmit vertically from sexually reproducing Daphnia. Our work fills critical gaps in the biology of Spirobacillus and illuminates new hypotheses vis-à-vis its life-history.