cE3c - Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal.
cE3c - Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal.
J Therm Biol. 2020 May;90:102580. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2020.102580. Epub 2020 Apr 4.
Thermal plasticity can help organisms coping with climate change. In this study, we analyse how laboratory populations of the ectotherm species Drosophila subobscura, originally from two distinct latitudes and evolving for several generations in a stable thermal environment (18 °C), respond plastically to new thermal challenges. We measured adult performance (fecundity traits as a fitness proxy) of the experimental populations when exposed to five thermal regimes, three with the same temperature during development and adulthood (15-15 °C, 18-18 °C, 25-25 °C), and two where flies developed at 18 °C and were exposed, during adulthood, to either 15 °C or 25 °C. Here, we test whether (1) flies undergo stress at the two more extreme temperatures; (2) development at a given temperature enhances adult performance at such temperature (i.e. acclimation), and (3) populations with different biogeographical history show plasticity differences. Our findings show (1) an optimal performance at 18 °C only if flies were subjected to the same temperature as juveniles and adults; (2) the occurrence of developmental acclimation at lower temperatures; (3) detrimental effects of higher developmental temperature on adult performance; and (4) a minor impact of historical background on thermal response. Our study indicates that thermal plasticity during development may have a limited role in helping adults cope with warmer - though not colder - temperatures, with a potential negative impact on population persistence under climate change. It also emphasizes the importance of analysing the impact of temperature on all stages of the life cycle to better characterize the thermal limits.
热塑性可以帮助生物应对气候变化。在这项研究中,我们分析了原本来自两个不同纬度的外温物种果蝇 subobscura 的实验室种群,它们在稳定的热环境(18°C)中经过几代进化后,如何对新的热挑战产生可塑性反应。我们测量了暴露于五种热环境中的实验种群的成虫表现(作为适合度代理的生育特征),这五种热环境包括三种在发育和成虫期具有相同温度的环境(15-15°C、18-18°C、25-25°C),以及两种在 18°C 下发育、成虫期暴露于 15°C 或 25°C 的环境。在这里,我们测试了以下三个问题:(1)两种更极端的温度是否会导致成虫产生压力;(2)在给定温度下发育是否会增强成虫在该温度下的表现(即驯化);(3)具有不同生物地理历史的种群是否表现出不同的可塑性差异。我们的研究结果表明:(1)如果成虫期的温度与幼年期相同,仅在 18°C 时表现出最佳性能;(2)在较低温度下发生发育驯化;(3)较高的发育温度对成虫表现产生不利影响;(4)历史背景对热反应的影响较小。我们的研究表明,发育过程中的热塑性可能在帮助成虫应对温暖但不寒冷的温度方面作用有限,对气候变化下种群的持续存在可能产生负面影响。它还强调了分析温度对生命周期所有阶段的影响以更好地描述热极限的重要性。