Suppr超能文献

在城市热岛效应下,橡果蚁形态对温度的显著不敏感性将生理耐受能力的进化与体型分离开来。

Remarkable insensitivity of acorn ant morphology to temperature decouples the evolution of physiological tolerance from body size under urban heat islands.

机构信息

Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, 44106, USA.

Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, 44106, USA.

出版信息

J Therm Biol. 2019 Oct;85:102426. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2019.102426. Epub 2019 Oct 3.

Abstract

Environmental temperature can alter body size and thermal tolerance, yet the effects of temperature rise on the size-tolerance relationship remain unclear. Terrestrial ectotherms with larger body sizes typically exhibit greater tolerance of high (and low) temperatures. However, while warming tends to increase tolerance of high temperatures through phenotypic plasticity and evolutionary change, warming tends to decrease body size through these mechanisms and thus might indirectly contribute to worse tolerance of high temperatures. These contrasting effects of warming on body size, thermal tolerance, and their relationship are increasingly important in light of global climate change. Here, we used replicated urban heat islands to explore the size-tolerance relationship in response to warming. We performed a common garden experiment with a small acorn-dwelling ant species collected from urban and rural populations across three different cities and reared under five laboratory rearing temperatures from 21 to 29 °C. We found that acorn ant body size was remarkably insensitive to laboratory rearing temperature (ant workers exhibited no phenotypic plasticity in body size across rearing temperature) and among populations experiencing cooler rural versus warmer urban environmental temperatures (no evolved differences in body size between urban and rural populations). Further, this insensitivity of body size to temperature was highly consistent across each of the three cities we examined. Because body size was robust to temperature variation, previously described plastic and evolved shifts in heat (and cold) tolerance in acorn ant responses to urbanization were shown to be independent of shifts in body size. Indeed, genetic (colony-level) correlations between heat and cold tolerance traits and body size revealed no significant association between size and tolerance. Our results show how typical trait correlations, such as between size and thermal tolerance, might be decoupled as populations respond to contemporary environmental change.

摘要

环境温度会改变体型和热耐受性,但温度升高对体型-耐受性关系的影响仍不清楚。体型较大的陆地变温动物通常对高温(和低温)有更大的耐受性。然而,虽然变暖通过表型可塑性和进化变化倾向于增加对高温的耐受性,但变暖通过这些机制往往会减小体型,从而可能间接地导致对高温的耐受性更差。鉴于全球气候变化,变暖对体型、热耐受性及其关系的这些相反影响变得越来越重要。在这里,我们使用复制的城市热岛来探索对变暖的体型-耐受性关系。我们进行了一项常见的花园实验,使用从小型橡果居住的蚂蚁物种中收集的样本,该物种来自三个不同城市的城市和农村地区,并在 21 到 29°C 的五个实验室饲养温度下进行饲养。我们发现,橡果蚁的体型对实验室饲养温度非常不敏感(蚂蚁工人在整个饲养温度范围内体型没有表现出表型可塑性),并且在经历较凉爽的农村与较温暖的城市环境温度的种群之间(城市和农村种群之间的体型没有进化差异)。此外,我们研究的三个城市中的每一个都表现出体型对温度的高度不敏感。由于体型对温度变化具有很强的抵抗力,因此以前描述的橡果蚁对城市化反应中的热(和冷)耐受性的可塑性和进化变化被证明与体型变化无关。事实上,热和冷耐受性特征与体型之间的遗传(群体水平)相关性表明,体型与耐受性之间没有显著关联。我们的研究结果表明,随着种群对当代环境变化的反应,体型和热耐受性等典型特征之间的相关性可能会脱钩。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验