Purdue University Graduate School
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INTERACTIVE AND INDIVIDUAL EFFECTS OF ANTHROPOGENIC ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS ON FRESHWATER ORGANISMS

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posted on 2024-07-02, 18:15 authored by Paradyse BlackwoodParadyse Blackwood
<p dir="ltr">In this dissertation, I explore how human actions (climate change, road salt, land use change, species invasions) interact with and influence morphology, disease, and population dynamics in freshwater organisms (amphibians and aquatic crustaceans). First, I examined how the incidence and timing of disease epidemics in native species (<i>Daphnia dentifera</i>) caused by a generalist parasite (<i>Metschnikowia bicuspidata</i>) influenced the success and impact of an invasive species (<i>Daphnia lumholtzi</i>) in freshwater zooplankton (Chapter 1). In the following chapter, I explored how host-parasite interactions are affected by the interactive effects of multiple environmental stressors, focusing on American bullfrog tadpoles (<i>Lithobates catesbeianus</i>), two of their common parasites (<i>Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis</i> (<i>Bd</i>) and trematode parasites in the family Echinostomatidae), and two common stressors (fluctuating temperatures and sublethal road salt pollution; Chapter 2). Finally, I investigated how the combination of climate (temperature and precipitation) and land use (developed and/or forested area) change have influenced the body size of a common toad (Fowler’s toad, <i>Anaxyrus fowleri</i>) from 1930 – 2020 utilizing museum specimens (Chapter 3). Together, this research establishes how emerging and persistent anthropogenic environmental stressors will interact to affect morphology, disease, and population dynamics in vulnerable freshwater organisms.</p>

Funding

Graduate Research Fellowship Program(GRFP)

Directorate for Education & Human Resources

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BEE: Evolutionary rescue in response to infectious disease: when will populations be rescued from pathogens?

Directorate for Biological Sciences

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National Science Foundation Non-Academic Research Internships for Graduate Students (NSF 21-013)

History

Degree Type

  • Doctor of Philosophy

Department

  • Biological Sciences

Campus location

  • West Lafayette

Advisor/Supervisor/Committee Chair

Catherine Searle

Additional Committee Member 2

Ximena Bernal

Additional Committee Member 3

Dennis Minchella

Additional Committee Member 4

Jessica Hua