The critical thermal maximum of diving beetles (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae): a comparison of subterranean and surface-dwelling species

IF 2.2 Q1 ENTOMOLOGY Current Research in Insect Science Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.cris.2021.100019
Karl K. Jones , William F. Humphreys , Mattia Saccò , Terry Bertozzi , Andy D. Austin , Steven J.B. Cooper
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Thermal tolerance limits in animals are often thought to be related to temperature and thermal variation in their environment. Recently, there has been a focus on studying upper thermal limits due to the likelihood for climate change to expose more animals to higher temperatures and potentially extinction. Organisms living in underground environments experience reduced temperatures and thermal variation in comparison to species living in surface habitats, but how these impact their thermal tolerance limits are unclear. In this study, we compare the thermal critical maximum (CTmax) of two subterranean diving beetles (Dytiscidae) to that of three related surface-dwelling species. Our results show that subterranean species have a lower CTmax (38.3-39.0°C) than surface species (42.0-44.5°C). The CTmax of subterranean species is ∼10°C higher than the highest temperature recorded within the aquifer. Groundwater temperature varied between 18.4°C and 28.8°C, and changes with time, depth and distance across the aquifer. Seasonal temperature fluctuations were 0.5°C at a single point, with the maximum heating rate being ∼1000x lower (0.008°C/hour) than that recorded in surface habitats (7.98°C/hour). For surface species, CTmax was 7-10°C higher than the maximum temperature in their habitats, with daily fluctuations from ∼1°C to 16°C and extremes of 6.9°C and 34.9°C. These findings suggest that subterranean dytiscid beetles are unlikely to reach their CTmax with a predicted warming of 1.3-5.1°C in the region by 2090. However, the impacts of long-term elevated temperatures on fitness, different life stages and other species in the beetle's trophic food web are unknown.

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潜水甲虫(鞘翅目:蝶蛾科)的临界热最大值:地下和地表物种的比较
动物的热耐受极限通常被认为与环境中的温度和热变化有关。最近,由于气候变化可能使更多的动物暴露于更高的温度和潜在的灭绝,人们一直关注于研究上限。与生活在地表栖息地的物种相比,生活在地下环境中的生物经历了更低的温度和热变化,但这些如何影响它们的热耐受极限尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们比较了两种地下潜水甲虫(Dytiscidae)与三种相关的地表栖息物种的热临界最大值(CTmax)。结果表明,地下物种的CTmax(38.3 ~ 39.0°C)低于地表物种(42.0 ~ 44.5°C)。地下物种的CTmax比含水层内记录的最高温度高~ 10°C。地下水温度在18.4 ~ 28.8℃之间变化,随时间、深度和跨越含水层的距离而变化。单个点的季节性温度波动为0.5°C,最大升温速率(0.008°C/小时)比地表栖息地记录的(7.98°C/小时)低约1000倍。地表物种的CTmax比其栖息地的最高温度高7-10°C,日波动范围为~ 1°C至16°C,极值范围为6.9°C和34.9°C。这些发现表明,到2090年,该地区预计升温1.3-5.1°C,地下dytiscid甲虫不太可能达到其CTmax。然而,长期升高的温度对甲虫的适应性、不同生命阶段和营养食物网中其他物种的影响尚不清楚。
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来源期刊
Current Research in Insect Science
Current Research in Insect Science Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
36 days
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