Plasticity in mosquito size and thermal tolerance across a latitudinal climate gradient

Author:

Lyberger Kelsey1ORCID,Farner Johannah E.1ORCID,Couper Lisa2ORCID,Mordecai Erin A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology Stanford University Stanford California USA

2. Department of Environmental Health Sciences University of California Berkeley Berkeley California USA

Abstract

Abstract Variation in heat tolerance among populations can determine whether a species is able to cope with ongoing climate change. Such variation may be especially important for ectotherms whose body temperatures, and consequently, physiological processes, are regulated by external conditions. Additionally, differences in body size are often associated with latitudinal clines, thought to be driven by climate gradients. While studies have begun to explore variation in body size and heat tolerance within species, our understanding of these patterns across large spatial scales, particularly regarding the roles of plasticity and genetic differences, remains incomplete. Here, we examine body size, as measured by wing length, and thermal tolerance, as measured by the time to immobilisation at high temperatures (“thermal knockdown”), in populations of the mosquito Aedes sierrensis collected from across a large latitudinal climate gradient spanning 1300 km (34–44° N). We find that mosquitoes collected from lower latitudes and warmer climates were more tolerant of high temperatures than those collected from higher latitudes and colder climates. Moreover, body size increased with latitude and decreased with temperature, a pattern consistent with James' rule, which appears to be a result of plasticity rather than genetic variation. Our results suggest that warmer environments produce smaller and more thermally tolerant populations.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Directorate for Biological Sciences

National Science Foundation

Stanford University Center for Innovation in Global Health

Stanford King Center on Global Development

Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment

Center for Computational, Evolutionary and Human Genomics, Stanford University

Publisher

Wiley

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