Rate dynamics of ectotherm responses to thermal stress

Author:

Kovacevic Aleksandra1ORCID,Latombe Guillaume2,Chown Steven L.1

Affiliation:

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

2. Department of Mathematical Sciences, Centre for Invasion Biology, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch 7602, South Africa

Abstract

Critical thermal limits (CTLs) show much variation associated with the experimental rate of temperature change used in their estimation. Understanding the full range of variation in rate effects on CTLs and their underlying basis is thus essential if methodological noise is not to overwhelm or bias the ecological signal. We consider the effects of rate variation from multiple intraspecific assessments and provide a comprehensive empirical analysis of the rate effects on both the critical thermal maximum (CT max ) and critical thermal minimum (CT min ) for 47 species of ectotherms, exploring which of the available theoretical models best explains this variation. We find substantial interspecific variation in rate effects, which takes four different forms (increase, decline, no change, mixed), with phylogenetic signal in effects on CT max , but not CT min . Exponential and zero exponential failure rate models best explain the rate effects on CT max . The majority of the empirical rate variation in CT min could not be explained by the failure rate models. Our work demonstrates that rate effects cannot be ignored in comparative analyses, and suggests that incorporation of the failure rate models into such analyses is a useful further avenue for exploration of the fundamental basis and implications of such variation.

Funder

Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment

Australian Research Council Discovery Project

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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