“…Such medicinal properties have been suggested for the common cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa against two parasites of Daphnia: the viral agent of white fat cell disease (Coopman, Muylaert, Lange, Reyserhove, & Decaestecker, 2014) and the yeast Metschnikowia bicuspidata (Sánchez, Huntley, Duffy, & Hunter, 2019). Overall, despite the substantial effort to relate the fitness of Daphnia parasites to single factors, such as food quality (Hall, Knight, et al, 2009a;Sánchez et al, 2019), nutrient availability (Frost, Ebert, & Smith, 2008;Narr, Ebert, Bastille-Rousseau, & Frost, 2019) and water temperature (Cuco, Castro, Gonçalves, Wolinska, & Abrantes, 2018;Vale et al, 2008), the combined effects of these stressors remain relatively unexplored in this system (but see Garbutt, Scholefield, Vale, & Little, 2014). As cyanobacteria blooms and heat waves are concurrent phenomena in nature (Joehnk et al, 2008), a comprehensive approach is required to make better epidemiological predictions in freshwater ecosystems.…”