Bodensteiner Brooke L, Gangloff Eric J, Kouyoumdjian Laura, Muñoz Martha M, Aubret Fabien
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, 165 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Station d'Ecologie Théorique et Expérimentale du CNRS - UMR 5321, 09200 Moulis, France.
J Exp Biol. 2021 Dec 15;224(24). doi: 10.1242/jeb.243660. Epub 2021 Dec 14.
In response to a warming climate, many montane species are shifting upslope to track the emergence of preferred temperatures. Characterizing patterns of variation in metabolic, physiological and thermal traits along an elevational gradient, and the plastic potential of these traits, is necessary to understand current and future responses to abiotic constraints at high elevations, including limited oxygen availability. We performed a transplant experiment with the upslope-colonizing common wall lizard (Podarcis muralis) in which we measured nine aspects of thermal physiology and aerobic capacity in lizards from replicate low- (400 m above sea level, ASL) and high-elevation (1700 m ASL) populations. We first measured traits at their elevation of origin and then transplanted half of each group to extreme high elevation (2900 m ASL; above the current elevational range limit of this species), where oxygen availability is reduced by ∼25% relative to sea level. After 3 weeks of acclimation, we again measured these traits in both the transplanted and control groups. The multivariate thermal-metabolic phenotypes of lizards originating from different elevations differed clearly when measured at the elevation of origin. For example, high-elevation lizards are more heat tolerant than their low-elevation counterparts (counter-gradient variation). Yet, these phenotypes converged after exposure to reduced oxygen availability at extreme high elevation, suggesting limited plastic responses under this novel constraint. Our results suggest that high-elevation populations are well suited to their oxygen environments, but that plasticity in the thermal-metabolic phenotype does not pre-adapt these populations to colonize more hypoxic environments at higher elevations.
为应对气候变暖,许多山地物种正在向山坡上方迁移,以追踪适宜温度的出现。了解沿海拔梯度的代谢、生理和热特征的变化模式以及这些特征的可塑性潜力,对于理解当前和未来对高海拔地区非生物限制因素(包括氧气供应有限)的响应至关重要。我们对向上坡扩散的普通壁蜥(Podarcis muralis)进行了一项移植实验,测量了来自重复的低海拔(海拔400米)和高海拔(海拔1700米)种群的蜥蜴的九个热生理和有氧能力方面的指标。我们首先在它们的原生海拔测量这些特征,然后将每组的一半移植到极端高海拔地区(海拔2900米;高于该物种当前的海拔范围上限),相对于海平面,那里的氧气供应减少了约25%。经过3周的适应后,我们再次测量了移植组和对照组的这些特征。当在原生海拔测量时,来自不同海拔的蜥蜴的多变量热代谢表型明显不同。例如,高海拔蜥蜴比低海拔蜥蜴更耐热(逆梯度变化)。然而,在极端高海拔地区暴露于低氧环境后,这些表型趋同,表明在这种新的限制条件下可塑性反应有限。我们的结果表明,高海拔种群非常适应它们的氧气环境,但热代谢表型的可塑性并没有使这些种群预先适应在更高海拔地区殖民更多低氧环境。