101. Comparative studies of critical physiological limits and vulnerability to environmental extremes in small ectotherms: How much environmental control is needed?
- Author
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Ary A. Hoffmann and Carla M. Sgrò
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Climate Change ,Vulnerability ,Reviews ,Climate change ,Context (language use) ,Review ,ectotherms ,Environment ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stress, Physiological ,Vulnerability assessment ,Cold acclimation ,Animals ,Control (linguistics) ,Physiology, Comparative ,Phylogeny ,stress resistance ,comparative studies ,Dehydration ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Temperature ,critical limits ,Quantitative genetics ,environmental control ,030104 developmental biology ,thermal limits ,Ectotherm ,Environmental science ,Animal Science and Zoology ,common garden ,business ,Body Temperature Regulation - Abstract
Researchers and practitioners are increasingly using comparative assessments of critical thermal and physiological limits to assess the relative vulnerability of ectothermic species to extreme thermal and aridity conditions occurring under climate change. In most assessments of vulnerability, critical limits are compared across taxa exposed to different environmental and developmental conditions. However, many aspects of vulnerability should ideally be compared when species are exposed to the same environmental conditions, allowing a partitioning of sources of variation such as used in quantitative genetics. This is particularly important when assessing the importance of different types of plasticity to critical limits, using phylogenetic analyses to test for evolutionary constraints, isolating genetic variants that contribute to limits, characterizing evolutionary interactions among traits limiting adaptive responses, and when assessing the role of cross generation effects. However, vulnerability assessments based on critical thermal/physiological limits also need to take place within a context that is relevant to field conditions, which is not easily provided under controlled environmental conditions where behavior, microhabitat, stress exposure rates and other factors will differ from field conditions. There are ways of reconciling these requirements, such as by taking organisms from controlled environments and then testing their performance under field conditions (or vice versa). While comparisons under controlled environments are challenging for many taxa, assessments of critical thermal limits and vulnerability will always be incomplete unless environmental effects within and across generations are considered, and where the ecological relevance of assays measuring critical limits can be established.
- Published
- 2018