Thermal tolerance patterns across latitude and elevation
Authors
Sunday, Jennifer; Bennett, Joanne M.; Calosi, Piero; Clusella Trullas, Susana; Gravel, Sarah; [et al.]Identifiers
Permanent link (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10017/64658DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0036
PMID: 31203755
ISSN: 0962-8436
Date
2019-06-17Academic Departments
Universidad de Alcalá. Departamento de Ciencias de la Vida
Teaching unit
Unidad Docente Ecología
Bibliographic citation
Sunday, J. et al. (2019) ‘Thermal tolerance patterns across latitude and elevation’, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological sciences, 374(1778), p. 20190036. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0036.
Keywords
Macrophysiology
Thermal tolerance limits
Climate Extremes Hypothesis
Physiological diversity
Critical thermal tolerance
Description / Notes
10 p.
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Rights
© 2019 The Author(s). Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
Linking variation in species? traits to large-scale environmental gradients can lend insight into the evolutionary processes that have shaped functional diversity and future responses to environmental change. Here, we ask how heat and cold tolerance vary as a function of latitude, elevation and climate extremes, using an extensive global dataset of ectotherm and endothermthermal tolerance limits, while accounting for methodological variation in acclimation temperature, ramping rate and duration of exposure among studies. We show that previously reported relationships between thermal limits and latitude in ectotherms are robust to variation in methods. Heat tolerance of terrestrial ectotherms declined marginally towards higher latitudes and did not vary with elevation, whereas heat tolerance of freshwater and marine ectotherms declined more steeply with latitude. By contrast, cold tolerance limits declined steeply with latitude in marine, intertidal, freshwaterandterrestrial ectotherms, and towards higherelevations on land. In all realms, both upperandlowerthermaltolerancelimits increased with extreme daily temperature, suggesting that different experienced climate extremes across realms explain the patterns, as predicted under the Climate Extremes Hypothesis. Statistically accounting for methodological variation in acclimation temperature, ramping rate and exposure duration improved model fits, and increased slopes with extreme ambient temperature. Our results suggest that fundamentally different patterns of thermal limits found amongtheearth?s realms may be largelyexplained by differences in episodic thermal extremes among realms, updating global macrophysiological ?rules?. This article is part of the theme issue ?Physiological diversity, biodiversity patterns and global climate change: testing key hypotheses involving temperature and oxygen?.
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