High‐resolution climate data reveal an increasing risk of warming‐driven activity restriction for diurnal and nocturnal lizards

Author:

Dufour Pauline C.1,Tsang Toby P. N.12,Alston Nicholas3,De Vos Tristan3,Clusella‐Trullas Susana4,Bonebrake Timothy C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Area of Biodiversity and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

2. Department of Biological Sciences University of Toronto‐Scarborough Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Self‐Employed Cape Town South Africa

4. Department of Botany and Zoology Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

Abstract

AbstractWidespread species experience a variety of climates across their distribution, which can structure their thermal tolerance, and ultimately, responses to climate change. For ectotherms, activity is highly dependent on temperature, its variability and availability of favourable microclimates. Thermal exposure and tolerance may be structured by the availability and heterogeneity of microclimates for species living along temperature and/or precipitation gradients – but patterns and mechanisms underlying such gradients are poorly understood. We measured critical thermal limits (CTmax and CTmin) for five populations of two sympatric lizard species, a nocturnal gecko (Chondrodactylus bibronii) and a diurnal skink (Trachylepis variegata) and recorded hourly thermal variation for a year in three types of microclimate relevant to the activity of lizards (crevice, full sun and partial shade) for six sites across a precipitation gradient. Using a combination of physiological and modelling approaches, we derived warming tolerance for the present and the end of the century. In the present climate, we found an overall wider thermal tolerance for the nocturnal species relative to the diurnal species, and no variation in CTmax but variable CTmin along the precipitation gradient for both species. However, warming tolerances varied significantly over the course of the day, across months and microhabitats. The diurnal skink was most restricted in its daily activity in the three driest sites with up to six daily hours of restricted activity in the open (i.e. outside refugia) during the summer months, while the impacts for the nocturnal gecko were less severe, due to its higher CTmax and night activity. With climate change, lizards will experience more months where activity is restricted and increased exposure to high temperatures even within the more sheltered microhabitats. Together our results highlight the importance of considering the relevant spatiotemporal scale and habitat for understanding the thermal exposure of diurnal and nocturnal species.

Publisher

Wiley

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