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Cool habitats support darker and bigger butterflies in Australian tropical forests

机译:凉爽的栖息地为澳大利亚热带森林中的黑蝴蝶和大蝴蝶提供了支持

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摘要

Morphology mediates the relationship between an organism's body temperature and its environment. Dark organisms, for example, tend to absorb heat more quickly than lighter individuals, which could influence their responses to temperature. Therefore, temperature‐related traits such as morphology may affect patterns of species abundance, richness, and community assembly across a broad range of spatial scales. In this study, we examined variation in color lightness and body size within butterfly communities across hot and cool habitats in the tropical woodland–rainforest ecosystems of northeast Queensland, Australia. Using thermal imaging, we documented the absorption of solar radiation relative to color lightness and wingspan and then built a phylogenetic tree based on available sequences to analyze the effects of habitat on these traits within a phylogenetic framework. In general, darker and larger individuals were more prevalent in cool, closed‐canopy rainforests than in immediately adjacent and hotter open woodlands. In addition, darker and larger butterflies preferred to be active in the shade and during crepuscular hours, while lighter and smaller butterflies were more active in the sun and midday hours—a pattern that held after correcting for phylogeny. Our ex situ experiment supported field observations that dark and large butterflies heated up faster than light and small butterflies under standardized environmental conditions. Our results show a thermal consequence of butterfly morphology across habitats and how environmental factors at a microhabitat scale may affect the distribution of species based on these traits. Furthermore, this study highlights how butterfly species might differentially respond to warming based on ecophysiological traits and how thermal refuges might emerge at microclimatic and habitat scales.
机译:形态学介导了生物体的体温与其环境之间的关系。例如,深色生物比较轻的生物吸收热量的速度更快,这可能会影响其对温度的反应。因此,与温度相关的性状(例如形态)可能会影响广泛空间范围内物种的丰富度,丰富度和群落聚集的模式。在这项研究中,我们研究了澳大利亚昆士兰州东北部热带林地-雨林生态系统中冷热生境中蝴蝶群落内颜色亮度和体型的变化。使用热成像技术,我们记录了相对于颜色亮度和翼展的太阳辐射吸收,然后根据可用序列构建了系统发育树,以在系统发育框架内分析栖息地对这些性状的影响。通常,在阴凉,封闭的雨林中,较黑的和较大的个体比在紧挨着且较热的开放林地中更为普遍。此外,深色和较大的蝴蝶更喜欢在树荫下和阴暗时分活跃,而较浅和较小的蝴蝶在阳光下和中午更活跃,这种现象在校正系统发育后一直保持。我们的异位实验支持现场观察,在标准的环境条件下,深色和大型蝴蝶的加热速度快于浅色和小型蝴蝶。我们的结果显示了整个栖息地蝴蝶形态的热结果,以及在微生境规模上的环境因素如何影响基于这些特征的物种分布。此外,这项研究强调了蝴蝶物种如何根据生态生理特征对变暖做出不同反应,以及如何在微气候和栖息地范围内形成避难所。

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