Thermal tolerance of tropical and temperate alpine plants suggests that ‘mountain passes are not higher in the tropics’

Author:

Sklenář Petr1ORCID,Jaramillo Ricardo23ORCID,Wojtasiak Susanne Sivila45,Meneses Rosa Isela56ORCID,Muriel Priscilla2ORCID,Klimeš Adam1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany, Faculty of Science Charles University Benátská 2 128 01 Prague Czech Republic

2. Escuela de Ciencias Biológicas Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

3. Instituto Biosfera Universidad San Francisco de Quito Quito Ecuador

4. Global Change Research Institute AS CR Bělidla 4a 602 00 Brno Czech Republic

5. Herbario Nacional de Bolivia, Instituto de Ecología, Carrera de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias Puras y Naturales Universidad Mayor de San Andrés Calle 27 y Andrés Bell s/n Cota Cota La Paz Bolivia

6. Instituto de Investigaciones Arqueológicas y Museo Universidad Católica del Norte San Pedro de Atacama Chile

Abstract

AbstractAimTolerance of species to extreme temperatures largely determines their distribution and vulnerability to climate change. We examined thermal tolerance in tropical and temperate alpine plants, testing the hypotheses that: (a) temperate plants are resistant to more extreme temperatures and have an overall wider thermal tolerance breadth (TTB); (b) TTB in temperate plants is wider than TTB in tropical plants during the entire growing season; (c) resistance to frost and heat varies during the season in temperate plants but not in tropical plants; (d) TTB of a species predicts its latitudinal range.LocationTropical (Ecuador, Bolivia) and temperate (USA, Austria) mountains.Time periodFour periods of the growing season (2014, 2016–2019).Major taxaNinety‐six vascular plant species.MethodsWe employed the electrolyte leakage method to estimate the temperature resistance, that is, the temperature at which 50% tissue injury (Lt50) occurs in leaves. We used phylogenetic linear mixed‐effect models in a Bayesian framework to test for differences between the plant groups.ResultsTemperate and tropical plants do not differ in their temperature resistance. The four hypotheses are rejected since: (a) temperate plants do not have significantly wider overall TTB compared to tropical plants, (b) TTB of temperate plants is wider than TTB of tropical plants only at the end of the temperate summer, (c) seasonal acclimation is observed in both plant groups, (d) the latitudinal range of the plants is not related to TTB.Main conclusionsThe lack of TTB differences between temperate and tropical alpine plants is consistent with trends observed in ectothermic animals, which suggests a general latitudinal pattern in high‐elevation poikilotherm organisms. Limited acclimation capacity to cope with long freezing exposures restricts the occurrence of tropical alpine species to thermally aseasonal environments making them particularly vulnerable to climate change.

Funder

Grantová Agentura České Republiky

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change

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