Blanckenhorn Wolf U, Gautier Roland, Nick Marcel, Puniamoorthy Nalini, Schäfer Martin A
Institut für Evolutionsbiologie & Umweltwissenschaften, Universität Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
Institut für Evolutionsbiologie & Umweltwissenschaften, Universität Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
J Therm Biol. 2014 Dec;46:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2014.09.007. Epub 2014 Sep 23.
Thermal tolerance varies at all hierarchical levels of biological organization: among species, populations, individuals, and even within individuals. Age- or developmental stage- and sex-specific thermal effects have received relatively little attention in the literature, despite being crucial for understanding thermal adaptation in nature and responses to global warming. We document stage- and sex- specific heat tolerance in the yellow dung fly Scathophaga stercoraria (Diptera: Scathophagidae), a species common throughout the northern hemisphere that generally favours cool climates. Exposure of eggs to temperatures up to 32°C did not affect larval hatching rate, but subsequent egg-to-adult survival at a benign temperature was reduced. Permanent transfer from benign (18°C) to hot temperatures (up to 31°C) at different larval and pupal stages strongly decreased egg-to-adult survival, though survival continuously improved the later the transfer occurred. Temporary transfer for only two days increased mortality more weakly, survival being lowest when temperature stress was imposed early during the larval or pupal stages. Adult flies provided with sugar and water tolerated 31°C longer than previously thought (5 days in males to 9 days in females). Eggs were thus less susceptible to thermal stress than larvae, pupae or adults, in agreement with the hypothesis that more mobile stages require less physiological protection against heat because they can behaviourally thermoregulate. The probability of mating, of laying a clutch, and hatching success were generally independently reduced by exposure of females or males to warm temperatures (24°C) during the juvenile or adult stages, with some interactions evident. High temperature stress thus affects survival differentially depending on when it occurs during the juvenile or the pre-reproductive adult life stage, and affects reproductive success via the mating behaviour of both sexes, female physiology in terms of oviposition, and fertility via sperm and/or egg quality. Our results illustrate that temperature stress, even when moderate and temporary, during early development can have profound lethal and non-lethal fitness-consequences later in life.
在生物组织的所有层次水平上,热耐受性都存在差异:在物种之间、种群之间、个体之间,甚至在个体内部。尽管年龄或发育阶段以及性别特异性的热效应对于理解自然界中的热适应和对全球变暖的反应至关重要,但在文献中受到的关注相对较少。我们记录了黄粪蝇(Scathophaga stercoraria,双翅目:粪蝇科)的阶段和性别特异性耐热性,该物种在北半球普遍存在,通常偏好凉爽气候。将卵暴露在高达32°C的温度下不会影响幼虫孵化率,但随后在适宜温度下从卵到成虫的存活率会降低。在幼虫和蛹的不同阶段从适宜温度(18°C)永久转移到高温(高达31°C)会强烈降低从卵到成虫的存活率,不过转移发生得越晚,存活率持续提高得越多。仅进行两天的临时转移对死亡率的增加作用较弱,当在幼虫或蛹阶段早期施加温度胁迫时,存活率最低。提供糖和水的成年苍蝇耐受31°C的时间比之前认为的更长(雄性为5天,雌性为9天)。因此,卵比幼虫、蛹或成虫对热胁迫更不敏感,这与以下假设一致:更具移动性的阶段对热的生理保护需求较少,因为它们可以通过行为进行体温调节。在幼虫期或成虫期将雌性或雄性暴露于温暖温度(24°C)通常会独立降低交配、产卵和孵化成功的概率,且存在一些明显的相互作用。因此,高温胁迫对存活率的影响因在幼虫期或生殖前成虫生命阶段发生的时间不同而有所差异,并通过两性的交配行为、雌性产卵方面的生理机能以及精子和/或卵子质量对繁殖成功率产生影响。我们的结果表明,即使在早期发育过程中温度胁迫是适度且短暂的,也可能在生命后期产生深远的致死和非致死适应性后果。