Temperature change exerts sex-specific effects on behavioural variation

Author:

Brand Jack A.12ORCID,Yee Winston K. W.1,Aitkenhead Ian J.1,Martin Jake M.123,Polverino Giovanni145ORCID,Chown Steven L.1,Wong Bob B. M.1ORCID,Dowling Damian K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, 3800, Australia

2. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umeå, Västerbotten, SE-907 36, Sweden

3. Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, 10691, Sweden

4. Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, 6009, Australia

5. Department of Ecological and Biological Sciences, Tuscia University, Viterbo, Lazio, 01100, Italy

Abstract

Temperature is a key factor mediating organismal fitness and has important consequences for species' ecology. While the mean effects of temperature on behaviour have been well-documented in ectotherms, how temperature alters behavioural variation among and within individuals, and whether this differs between the sexes, remains unclear. Such effects likely have ecological and evolutionary consequences, given that selection acts at the individual level. We investigated the effect of temperature on individual-level behavioural variation and metabolism in adult male and female Drosophila melanogaster ( n = 129), by taking repeated measures of locomotor activity and metabolic rate at both a standard temperature (25°C) and a high temperature (28°C). Males were moderately more responsive in their mean activity levels to temperature change when compared to females. However, this was not true for either standard or active metabolic rate, where no sex differences in thermal metabolic plasticity were found. Furthermore, higher temperatures increased both among- and within-individual variation in male, but not female, locomotor activity. Given that behavioural variation can be critical to population persistence, we suggest that future studies test whether sex differences in the amount of behavioural variation expressed in response to temperature change may result in sex-specific vulnerabilities to a warming climate.

Funder

The Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment from The Ecological Society of Australia

Australian Research Council

The Australasian Society for the Study of Animal Behaviour

Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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