Bulgarella Mariana, Haywood John, Dowle Eddy J, Morgan-Richards Mary, Trewick Steven A
Ecology, College of Science, Massey University Manawatū, Private Bag 11-222, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand.
School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand.
Curr Res Insect Sci. 2024 Jul 24;6:100092. doi: 10.1016/j.cris.2024.100092. eCollection 2024.
Standard metabolic rates (SMR) of ectotherms reflect the energetic cost of self-maintenance and thus provide important information about life-history strategies of organisms. We examined variation in SMR among fifteen species of New Zealand orthopteran. These species represent a heterogeneous group with a wide geographic distribution, differing morphologies and life histories. Gathering original data on morphological and physiological traits of individual species is a first step towards understanding existing variability. Individual metabolic rates of ectotherms are one of the first traits to respond to climate change. Baseline SMR datasets are valuable for modeling current species distributions and their responses to a changing climate. At higher latitudes, the average environmental temperature decreases. The pattern that cold-adapted ectotherms display higher SMR at colder temperatures and greater thermal sensitivity to compensate for lower temperatures and the shorter growing and reproductive seasons is predicted from the metabolic cold adaptation (MCA) hypothesis. We predict higher SMR for the orthopteran species found at higher latitudes. We further compared the index of thermal sensitivity Q per species. We used closed-system respirometry to measure SMR, at two test temperatures (4 °C and 14 °C), for the fifteen species acclimated to the same conditions. As expected, we found significant differences in SMR among species. The rate of oxygen consumption was positively correlated with body mass. Our findings do not support the MCA hypothesis. In fact, we found evidence of co-gradient variation in SMR, whereby insects from higher elevations and latitudes presented lower SMR. We discuss our findings in relation to life histories and ecology of each species. The novel physiological data presented will aid in understanding potential responses of these unusual species to changing climatic conditions in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
变温动物的标准代谢率(SMR)反映了自我维持的能量消耗,因此提供了有关生物体生活史策略的重要信息。我们研究了15种新西兰直翅目昆虫的SMR变化。这些物种代表了一个异质群体,具有广泛的地理分布、不同的形态和生活史。收集单个物种形态和生理特征的原始数据是理解现有变异性的第一步。变温动物的个体代谢率是最早对气候变化做出反应的特征之一。基线SMR数据集对于模拟当前物种分布及其对气候变化的反应很有价值。在高纬度地区,平均环境温度会降低。根据代谢冷适应(MCA)假说预测,适应寒冷的变温动物在较冷的温度下会表现出较高的SMR,并且对温度变化更敏感,以补偿较低的温度以及较短的生长和繁殖季节。我们预测在高纬度地区发现的直翅目物种具有更高的SMR。我们进一步比较了每个物种的热敏感性指数Q。我们使用封闭系统呼吸测定法,在两个测试温度(4°C和14°C)下,对适应相同条件的15个物种测量SMR。正如预期的那样,我们发现物种之间的SMR存在显著差异。氧气消耗率与体重呈正相关。我们的研究结果不支持MCA假说。事实上,我们发现了SMR共梯度变化的证据,即来自较高海拔和纬度的昆虫表现出较低的SMR。我们结合每个物种的生活史和生态学来讨论我们的发现。所呈现的新生理数据将有助于理解这些独特物种对新西兰/奥特亚罗瓦不断变化的气候条件的潜在反应。