I was thinking about the role of fever in humans–as I understand it, the temporary suckiness to the organism is still worth it to make the host less hospitable to viruses and, in ways I understand even less, benefits our systemic physiological response to infection.
So this OP is based on my understanding that thermal regulation just isn’t A Thing for cold-blooded creatures, which is undoubtedly over-simplified. Given that, an alternative question as subject header (with viruses in mind) might be “Do fish catch colds? And then what?”
Can anyone talk about fever, I guess, more generally, in light of my (mis)understanding of cold-blooded biology? Hell, any veterinarian comments on fish with snivels is good too.
*Somewhere/somewhen in SD is my OP “Do tapeworms sleep?”, to which IMO this OP may turn out to be a worthy companion.
As you say, fish are cold-blooded (ectothermic). Their body temperature is essentially that of the water they’re swimming it. A fish can’t run a fever.
So have viruses figured out, evolutionarily, that cold-blooded animals are terrific hosts, and fish can a ton of them? Or since fish have no thermal “defense” against them except simply dying, which does viruses no good, so the opposite is true?
I guess I should have made the OP lead, “do fish catch colds?”…because I figured they don’t get fevers.
Add to that I have no clue as to the fantastic back-and-forths in the virus-host struggles in any animal besides this one datum of thermal situations.
Well, not all fish. Tuna can elevate their body temperature through the effort of swimming at high speed. You could call it a fever in some sense of the word but it’s not due to illness.