Fattorini Simone
Department of Life, Health and Environmental Sciences, University of L'Aquila, Via Vetoio, 67100 L'Aquila, Italy.
Insects. 2024 Sep 5;15(9):673. doi: 10.3390/insects15090673.
In endotherms, body size tends to increase with elevation and latitude (i.e., with decreasing temperatures) (Bergmann's rule). These patterns are explained in terms of heat balance since larger animals need to produce less heat relative to their size to maintain stable body temperatures. In ectotherms like most insects, where this mechanism cannot operate, a reverse pattern is frequently observed, as a higher surface area-to-volume ratio in colder climates may allow for more rapid heating and cooling. However, patterns of increasing body size with decreasing temperatures can also be observed in ectotherms if selection for more stable internal temperatures leads to smaller surface area-to-volume ratios. Data on tenebrionids from Latium (Central Italy) were used to model elevational variations in average values of body size (total length, mass and volume) and surface area-to-volume ratio. Analyses were performed by considering the whole fauna and two ecological groups separately: ground-dwelling species (geophilous) and arboreal (xylophilous) species. The surface area-to-volume ratios declined with increasing elevation in all cases, indicating that the need for heat conservation is more important than rapid heating and cooling. However, in xylophilous species (which typically live under bark), body size increased with increasing elevation, and in geophilous species, an opposite pattern was observed up to about 1000 m, followed by an increasing pattern. This suggests that a reduction in resource availability with elevation limits body size in geophilous species up to a certain elevation but not in xylophilopus species, which benefit from more climatically stable conditions and constant resources and need energy for overwintering.
在恒温动物中,体型往往会随着海拔和纬度的升高(即随着温度降低)而增大(伯格曼法则)。这些模式可以从热平衡的角度来解释,因为较大的动物相对于其体型而言需要产生较少的热量来维持稳定的体温。在大多数昆虫这类变温动物中,这种机制无法起作用,经常会观察到相反的模式,因为在较寒冷的气候中较高的表面积与体积之比可能有利于更快速的升温与降温。然而,如果对更稳定的内部温度的选择导致表面积与体积之比变小,那么在变温动物中也可以观察到体型随温度降低而增大的模式。来自意大利中部拉齐奥地区的拟步甲科昆虫的数据被用于模拟体型(总长度、质量和体积)平均值以及表面积与体积之比的海拔变化。分析分别考虑了整个动物群落以及两个生态类群:地栖物种(地栖性)和树栖物种(嗜木性)。在所有情况下,表面积与体积之比都随着海拔升高而下降,这表明保存热量的需求比快速升温和降温更为重要。然而,在嗜木性物种(通常生活在树皮之下)中,体型随着海拔升高而增大,而在地栖性物种中,在海拔约1000米之前观察到相反的模式,之后则呈现增大的模式。这表明随着海拔升高资源可用性的降低限制了地栖性物种在一定海拔以下的体型,但对嗜木性物种则没有限制,嗜木性物种受益于更稳定的气候条件和恒定的资源,并且需要能量来过冬。