Conservation Biology Research Group, Faculty of Sciences, Universidad de Extremadura, Badajoz, Spain.
Conservation Biology Research Group, Faculty of Sciences, Universidad de Extremadura, Badajoz, Spain; Ecology in the Anthropocene, Associated Unit CSIC-UEx, Faculty of Sciences, Universidad de Extremadura, Badajoz, Spain.
J Therm Biol. 2024 Oct;125:103977. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.103977. Epub 2024 Sep 20.
Discrete populations of widely distributed species may inhabit areas with marked differences in climatic conditions across geographic and seasonal scales, which could result in intraspecific variation in thermal physiology reflecting genetic adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, or both. However, few studies have evaluated inter-population variation in physiological responses to heat. We evaluated within- and inter-population seasonal variation in heat tolerance, cooling efficiency and other key thermoregulatory traits in two Mediterranean populations of Great tit Parus major experiencing contrasting thermal environments: a lowland population subject to hotter summers and a higher annual thermal amplitude than a montane population. Specifically, we measured heat tolerance limits (HTL), body temperature, resting metabolic rate, evaporative water loss, and evaporative cooling efficiency (the ratio between evaporative heat loss to metabolic heat production) within and above the thermoneutral zone during winter and summer. Heat tolerance during summer was greater in lowland than in montane birds; indeed, lowland birds seasonally increased this trait to a significant level, while montane ones did to a lesser extent. Besides, lowland birds showed greater evaporative cooling efficiency during summer (possibly due in part to reductions in total endogenous heat load), while surprisingly montane ones showed the opposite trend. Thus, lowland birds displayed greater seasonal flexibility in HTL, body temperature and resting metabolic rate above thermoneutrality, thus giving some support to the climatic variability hypothesis - that flexibility in thermoregulatory traits should increase with climatic variability. Our results partially support the idea that songbirds' adaptive thermoregulation in the heat is flexible, highlighting the importance of considering intraspecific variation in thermoregulatory traits when modelling the future distribution and persistence of species under different climate change scenarios.
广泛分布的物种的离散种群可能栖息在地理和季节性尺度上气候条件差异显著的区域,这可能导致种内热生理的变化,反映遗传适应、表型可塑性或两者兼而有之。然而,很少有研究评估对热的生理反应的种群间变化。我们评估了两个经历不同热环境的地中海大山雀 Parus major 种群的热耐受、冷却效率和其他关键体温调节特征的种群内和种群间季节性变化:一个是低地种群,夏季更热,年热幅度比山地种群高。具体来说,我们在冬季和夏季测量了热耐受极限 (HTL)、体温、静止代谢率、蒸发失水和蒸发冷却效率(蒸发散热与代谢产热的比值)在热中性区内外的变化。夏季低地鸟类的热耐受能力大于山地鸟类;事实上,低地鸟类季节性地将这种特性提高到了一个显著的水平,而山地鸟类则没有那么大的提高。此外,低地鸟类在夏季表现出更高的蒸发冷却效率(可能部分是由于总内源性热负荷的减少),而令人惊讶的是,山地鸟类表现出相反的趋势。因此,低地鸟类在热中性区以上的 HTL、体温和静止代谢率方面表现出更大的季节性灵活性,这在一定程度上支持了气候变异性假说,即体温调节特征的灵活性应该随着气候变异性的增加而增加。我们的研究结果部分支持了鸟类在炎热环境中适应性体温调节是灵活的观点,强调了在不同气候变化情景下,考虑体温调节特征的种内变化对于物种未来分布和生存的重要性。