The role of thermal tolerance in determining elevational distributions of four arthropod taxa in mountain ranges of southern Asia

Author:

Khaliq Imran12ORCID,Shahid Muhammad Junaid2,Kamran Haseeb2,Sheraz Muhammad2,Awais Muhammad2,Shabir Mehtab2,Asghar Muhammad2,Rehman Abdul2,Riaz Maria34ORCID,Braschler Brigitte567ORCID,Sanders Nathan J.8ORCID,Hof Christian9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Aquatic Ecology Eawag (Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology) Dübendorf Switzerland

2. Department of Zoology Ghazi University Dera Ghazi Khan Pakistan

3. Conservation Genetics Group Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt Gelnhausen Germany

4. Faculty of Biological Sciences, Institute for Ecology, Evolution and Diversity Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Germany

5. Section of Conservation Biology, Department of Environmental Sciences University of Basel Basel Switzerland

6. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig Leipzig Germany

7. Institute fur Biologie Martin‐Luther‐University Halle‐Wittenberg Halle Germany

8. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA

9. Terrestrial Ecology Research Group, Department for Life Science Systems, School of Life Sciences Technical University of Munich Freising Germany

Abstract

Abstract Understanding the role of thermal tolerances in determining species distributions is important for assessing species responses to climate change. Two hypotheses linking physiology with species distributions have been put forward—the climatic variability hypothesis and the climatic extreme hypothesis. The climatic variability hypothesis predicts the selection of individuals with broad thermal tolerance in more variable climatic conditions and the climatic extreme hypothesis predicts the selection of individuals with extreme thermal tolerance values under extreme climatic conditions. However, no study has tested the predictions of these hypotheses simultaneously for several taxonomic groups along elevational gradients. Here, we related experimentally measured critical thermal maxima, critical thermal minima and thermal tolerance breadths for 15,187 individuals belonging to 116 species of ants, beetles, grasshoppers, and spiders from mountain ranges in central and northern Pakistan to the limits and breadths of their geographic and temperature range. Across all species and taxonomic groups, we found strong relationships between thermal traits and elevational distributions both in terms of geography and temperature. The relationships were robust when repeating the analyses for ants, grasshoppers, and spiders but not for beetles. These results indicate a strong role of physiology in determining elevational distributions of arthropods in Southern Asia. Overall, we found strong support for the climatic variability hypothesis and the climatic extreme hypothesis. A close association between species' distributional limits and their thermal tolerances suggest that in case of a failure to adapt or acclimate to novel climatic conditions, species may be under pressure to track their preferred climatic conditions, potentially facing serious consequences under current and future climate change.

Funder

Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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