Interdisciplinary Program of EcoCreative, Ewha Womans University, Ewhayeodaegil-52, Seoul, 03760, Republic of Korea.
Department of Life Science and Division of EcoScience, Ewha Womans University, Ewhayeodaegil-52, Seoul, 03760, Republic of Korea.
Sci Rep. 2020 Jan 28;10(1):1343. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-58276-0.
Rapid anthropogenic alterations caused by urbanization are increasing temperatures in urban cores, a phenomenon known as the urban heat island (UHI) effect. Two cicada species, Cryptotympana atrata and Hyalessa fuscata (Hemiptera: Cicadidae), are abundant in metropolitan Seoul where their population densities correlate strongly with UHI intensities. Such a positive correlation between cicada density and UHI intensity may be possible if cicada abundance is linked to a certain thermal tolerance. We tested this hypothesis by investigating variation in morphology and thermal responses of two cicada species along a thermal gradient in Seoul and surrounding areas. The morphological responses were measured by metrics such as length, thorax width and depth, and mass. The thermal responses were measured in terms of minimum flight temperature, maximum voluntary temperature and heat torpor temperature. First, we observed a species-specific variation in thermal responses, in which C. atrata displayed a higher thermal threshold for maximum voluntary and heat torpor temperatures than H. fuscata. Second, a positive association between temperature conditions and body sizes were displayed in females H. fuscata, but not in either conspecific males or C. atrata individuals. Third, C. atrata exhibited similar thermal responses regardless of habitat temperature, while H. fuscata in warmer areas showed an increase in heat tolerance. In addition, H. fuscata individuals with bigger thorax sizes were more heat-tolerant than those with smaller thoraxes. Overall, our research is the first to detect a variation in thermal responses and body size of H. fuscata individuals at a local scale. More investigations would be needed to better understand the adaptation mechanisms of insects linked to UHI effects.
城市化导致的快速人为改变正在增加城市核心区的温度,这种现象被称为城市热岛(UHI)效应。蝉科的两种蝉,Cryptotympana atrata 和 Hyalessa fuscata,在大都市首尔很丰富,它们的种群密度与 UHI 强度强烈相关。如果蝉的丰度与一定的热耐受度有关,那么蝉密度与 UHI 强度之间的这种正相关关系是可能的。我们通过在首尔及其周边地区的热梯度上调查两种蝉的形态和热反应的变化来验证这一假设。形态反应通过长度、胸部宽度和深度以及质量等指标来测量。热反应以最小飞行温度、最大自愿温度和热迟钝温度来衡量。首先,我们观察到热反应的种特异性变化,其中 C. atrata 对最大自愿和热迟钝温度的热阈值高于 H. fuscata。其次,在雌性 H. fuscata 中,温度条件与体型之间存在正相关关系,但在同种雄性或 C. atrata 个体中则没有。第三,C. atrata 无论栖息地温度如何,其热反应都相似,而在较温暖地区的 H. fuscata 则表现出耐热性的提高。此外,胸部较大的 H. fuscata 个体比胸部较小的个体更耐热。总的来说,我们的研究首次在局部尺度上检测到 H. fuscata 个体的热反应和体型的变化。需要更多的研究来更好地了解与 UHI 效应相关的昆虫的适应机制。