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行为和生理机能能否减轻变暖对变温动物的影响?一项针对城市蚂蚁的测试。

Can behaviour and physiology mitigate effects of warming on ectotherms? A test in urban ants.

作者信息

Youngsteadt Elsa, Prado Sara Guiti, Keleher Kirsten Joanna, Kirchner Michelle

机构信息

Department of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.

Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2023 Mar;92(3):568-579. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13860. Epub 2023 Jan 15.

Abstract

Global climate change is expected to have pervasive effects on the diversity and distribution of species, particularly ectotherms whose body temperatures depend on environmental temperatures. However, these impacts remain difficult to predict, in part because ectotherms may adapt or acclimate to novel conditions or may use behavioural thermoregulation to reduce their exposure to stressful microclimates. Here we examine the potential for physiological and behavioural changes to mitigate effects of environmental warming on five species of ants in a temperate forest habitat subject to urban warming. We worked in eight urban and eight non-urban forest sites in North Carolina, USA; sites experienced a 1.1°C range of mean summer air temperatures. At each site, we documented species-specific microclimates (ant operative temperatures, T ) and ant activity on a transect of 14 bait stations at three times of day. In the laboratory, we measured upper thermal tolerance (CT ) and thermal preference (T ) for each focal species. We then asked whether thermal traits shifted at hotter sites, and whether ants avoided non-preferred microclimates in the field. CT and T did not increase at warmer sites, indicating that these populations did not adapt or acclimate to urban warming. Consistent with behavioural thermoregulation, four of the five species were less likely to occupy baits where T departed from T . Apparent thermoregulation resulted from fixed diel activity patterns that helped ants avoid the most inappropriate temperatures but did not compensate for daily or spatial temperature variation: Hotter sites had hotter ants. This study uses a novel approach to detect behavioural thermoregulation and sublethal warming in foraging insects. The results suggest that adaptation and behaviour may not protect common temperate forest ants from a warming climate, and highlight the need to evaluate effects of chronic, sublethal warming on small ectotherms.

摘要

全球气候变化预计将对物种的多样性和分布产生广泛影响,尤其是变温动物,它们的体温取决于环境温度。然而,这些影响仍然难以预测,部分原因是变温动物可能会适应新环境或通过行为体温调节来减少暴露于压力微气候的机会。在这里,我们研究了生理和行为变化减轻环境变暖对温带森林栖息地中五种蚂蚁影响的可能性,该栖息地正经历城市变暖。我们在美国北卡罗来纳州的八个城市森林和八个非城市森林地点开展研究;这些地点夏季平均气温范围为1.1°C。在每个地点,我们记录了特定物种的微气候(蚂蚁有效温度,T)以及一天中三个时段在14个诱饵站的样带上蚂蚁的活动情况。在实验室中,我们测量了每个目标物种的热耐受上限(CT)和热偏好(T)。然后我们询问热特性在较热的地点是否发生了变化,以及蚂蚁在野外是否避开了非偏好的微气候。CT和T在较温暖的地点并没有增加,这表明这些种群没有适应或驯化以应对城市变暖。与行为体温调节一致,五种蚂蚁中有四种不太可能占据T偏离T的诱饵。明显的体温调节源于固定的昼夜活动模式,这有助于蚂蚁避开最不适宜的温度,但无法补偿每日或空间温度变化:较热的地点有更热的蚂蚁。本研究采用了一种新颖的方法来检测觅食昆虫的行为体温调节和亚致死性变暖。结果表明,适应和行为可能无法保护常见的温带森林蚂蚁免受气候变暖的影响,并强调了评估慢性亚致死性变暖对小型变温动物影响的必要性。

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