Thermal tolerance, acclimatory capacity and vulnerability to global climate change
- 6 November 2007
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Biology Letters
- Vol. 4 (1) , 99-102
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2007.0408
Abstract
Despite evidence that organismal distributions are shifting in response to recent climatic warming, we have little information on direct links between species' physiology and vulnerability to climate change. We demonstrate a positive relationship between upper thermal tolerance and its acclimatory ability in a well-defined clade of closely related European diving beetles. We predict that species with the lowest tolerance to high temperatures will be most at risk from the adverse effects of future warming, since they have both low absolute thermal tolerance and poor acclimatory ability. Upper thermal tolerance is also positively related to species' geographical range size, meaning that species most at risk are already the most geographically restricted ones, being endemic to Mediterranean mountain systems. Our findings on the relationship between tolerance and acclimatory ability contrast with results from marine animals, suggesting that generalizations regarding thermal tolerance and responses to future rapid climate change may be premature.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Metacommunities. Spatial Dynamics and Ecological Communities. Marcel Holyoak, Mathew A. Leibold, and Robert D. Holt, editorsIntegrative and Comparative Biology, 2006
- Trade‐Offs in Thermal Adaptation: The Need for a Molecular to Ecological IntegrationPhysiological and Biochemical Zoology, 2006
- Are mountain passes higher in the tropics? janzen's hypothesis revisitedIntegrative and Comparative Biology, 2006
- Widespread amphibian extinctions from epidemic disease driven by global warmingNature, 2006
- A falsification of the thermal specialization paradigm: compensation for elevated temperatures in Antarctic fishesBiology Letters, 2005
- Relative importance of plastic vs genetic factors in adaptive differentiation: geographical variation for stress resistance in Drosophila melanogaster from eastern AustraliaFunctional Ecology, 2005
- Macrophysiology: large‐scale patterns in physiological traits and their ecological implicationsFunctional Ecology, 2004
- Fingerprints of global warming on wild animals and plantsNature, 2003
- Range Shifts and Adaptive Responses to Quaternary Climate ChangeScience, 2001
- Thermal tolerance, climatic variability and latitudeProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2000