Author:
Sears Michael W.,Angilletta Michael J.,Schuler Matthew S.,Borchert Jason,Dilliplane Katherine F.,Stegman Monica,Rusch Travis W.,Mitchell William A.
Abstract
Although most organisms thermoregulate behaviorally, biologists still cannot easily predict whether mobile animals will thermoregulate in natural environments. Current models fail because they ignore how the spatial distribution of thermal resources constrains thermoregulatory performance over space and time. To overcome this limitation, we modeled the spatially explicit movements of animals constrained by access to thermal resources. Our models predict that ectotherms thermoregulate more accurately when thermal resources are dispersed throughout space than when these resources are clumped. This prediction was supported by thermoregulatory behaviors of lizards in outdoor arenas with known distributions of environmental temperatures. Further, simulations showed how the spatial structure of the landscape qualitatively affects responses of animals to climate. Biologists will need spatially explicit models to predict impacts of climate change on local scales.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
224 articles.
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