globalchange  > 全球变化的国际研究计划
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13088
WOS记录号: WOS:000485227400001
论文题名:
Latitude-associated evolution and drivers of thermal response curves in body stoichiometry
作者: Van Dievel, Marie; Tuzun, Nedim; Stoks, Robby
通讯作者: Stoks, Robby
刊名: JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
ISSN: 0021-8790
EISSN: 1365-2656
出版年: 2019
语种: 英语
英文关键词: elemental contents ; geographic gradient ; space-for-time substitution ; spatial ecological stoichiometry ; temperature-size rule ; thermal compensation ; thermal melanism hypothesis ; thermal reaction norm
WOS关键词: CLIMATE-CHANGE ; PERFORMANCE CURVES ; ORGANISM SIZE ; LIFE-HISTORY ; GROWTH-RATES ; TEMPERATURE ; STRESS ; ENERGY ; PREDATION ; COUNTERGRADIENT
WOS学科分类: Ecology ; Zoology
WOS研究方向: Environmental Sciences & Ecology ; Zoology
英文摘要:

Trait-based studies are needed to understand the plastic and genetic responses of organisms to warming. A neglected organismal trait is elemental composition, despite its potential to cascade into effects on the ecosystem level. Warming is predicted to shape elemental composition through shifts in storage molecules associated with responses in growth, body size and metabolic rate. Our goals were to quantify thermal response patterns in body composition and to obtain insights into their underlying drivers and their evolution across latitudes. We reconstructed the thermal response curves (TRCs) for body elemental composition [C (carbon), N (nitrogen) and the C:N ratio] of damselfly larvae from high- and low-latitude populations. Additionally, we quantified the TRCs for survival, growth and development rates and body size to assess local thermal adaptation, as well as the TRCs for metabolic rate and key macromolecules (proteins, fat, sugars and cuticular melanin and chitin) as these may underlie the elemental TRCs. All larvae died at 36 degrees C. Up to 32 degrees C, low-latitude larvae increased growth and development rates and did not suffer increased mortality. Instead, growth and development rates of high-latitude larvae were lower and levelled off at 24 degrees C, and mortality increased at 32 degrees C. This latitude-associated thermal adaptation pattern matched the 'hotter-is-better' hypothesis. With increasing temperatures, low-latitude larvae decreased C:N, while high-latitude larvae increased C:N. These patterns were driven by associated changes in N contents, while C contents did not respond to temperature. Consistent with the temperature-size rule and the thermal melanism hypothesis, body size and melanin levels decreased with warming. While all traits and associated macromolecules (except for metabolic rate that showed thermal compensation) assumed to underlie thermal responses in elemental composition showed thermal plasticity, these were largely independent and none could explain the stoichiometric TRCs. Our results highlight that thermal responses in elemental composition cannot be explained by traditionally assumed drivers, asking for a broader perspective including the thermal dependence of elemental fluxes. Another key implication is that thermal evolution can reverse the plastic stoichiometric thermal responses and hence reverse how warming may shape food web dynamics through changes in body composition at different latitudes.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/146783
Appears in Collections:全球变化的国际研究计划

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作者单位: Univ Leuven, Evolutionary Stress Ecol & Ecotoxicol, Leuven, Belgium

Recommended Citation:
Van Dievel, Marie,Tuzun, Nedim,Stoks, Robby. Latitude-associated evolution and drivers of thermal response curves in body stoichiometry[J]. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY,2019-01-01
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