Gilbert Anthony L, Lattanzio Matthew S
Department of Biological Sciences, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, United States of America.
Department of Organismal and Environmental Biology, Christopher Newport University, Newport News, Virginia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Feb 3;11(2):e0146904. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146904. eCollection 2016.
Climate change is rapidly altering the way current species interact with their environment to satisfy life-history demands. In areas anticipated to experience extreme warming, rising temperatures are expected to diminish population growth, due either to environmental degradation, or the inability to tolerate novel temperature regimes. Determining how at risk ectotherms, and lizards in particular, are to changes in climate traditionally emphasizes the thermal ecology and thermal sensitivity of physiology of adult members of a population. In this study, we reveal ontogenetic differences in thermal physiological and ecological traits that have been used to anticipate how ectotherms will respond to climate change. We show that the thermal biological traits of juvenile Yarrow's Spiny Lizards (Sceloporus jarrovii) differ from the published estimates of the same traits for adult lizards. Juvenile S. jarrovii differ in their optimal performance temperature, field field-active body temperature, and critical thermal temperatures compared to adult S. jarrovii. Within juvenile S. jarrovii, males and females exhibit differences in field-active body temperature and desiccation tolerance. Given the observed age- and sex-related variation in thermal physiology, we argue that not including physiological differences in thermal biology throughout ontogeny may lead to misinterpretation of patterns of ecological or evolutionary change due to climate warming. Further characterizing the potential for ontogenetic changes in thermal biology would be useful for a more precise and accurate estimation of the role of thermal physiology in mediating population persistence in warmer environments.
气候变化正在迅速改变当前物种与环境相互作用以满足生活史需求的方式。在预计会经历极端变暖的地区,由于环境退化或无法耐受新的温度 regime,气温上升预计会减少种群增长。确定变温动物,尤其是蜥蜴,在气候变化面前面临多大风险,传统上强调种群成年成员的热生态学和生理热敏感性。在这项研究中,我们揭示了热生理和生态特征的个体发育差异,这些差异已被用于预测变温动物将如何应对气候变化。我们表明,雅罗刺蜥(Sceloporus jarrovii)幼体的热生物学特征与已发表的成年蜥蜴相同特征的估计值不同。与成年雅罗刺蜥相比,幼年雅罗刺蜥在最佳表现温度、野外活动体温和临界热温度方面存在差异。在幼年雅罗刺蜥中,雄性和雌性在野外活动体温和耐干燥性方面存在差异。鉴于观察到的热生理方面与年龄和性别相关的变化,我们认为在整个个体发育过程中不考虑热生物学中的生理差异,可能会导致对气候变暖引起的生态或进化变化模式的误解。进一步描述热生物学个体发育变化的可能性,将有助于更精确准确地估计热生理在介导种群在温暖环境中持续存在方面的作用。