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首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Experimental Biology >Thermal limitation of performance and biogeography in a free-ranging ectotherm: insights from accelerometry
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Thermal limitation of performance and biogeography in a free-ranging ectotherm: insights from accelerometry

机译:自由放热中性能和生物地理学的热限制:来自加速度计的见解

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Theoretical and laboratory studies generally show that ectotherm performance increases with temperature to an optimum, and subsequently declines. Several physiological mechanisms probably shape thermal performance curves, but responses of free-ranging animals to temperature variation will represent a compromise between these mechanisms and ecological constraints. Thermal performance data from wild animals balancing physiology and ecology are rare, and this represents a hindrance for predicting population impacts of future temperature change. We used internally implanted accelerometers near the middle of a species' geographical distribution and gill-net catch data near the species' latitudinal extremes to quantify temperature-related activity levels of a wild predatory fish (Platycephalus fuscus). We examined our data in the context of established models of thermal performance, and the relationship between thermal performance thresholds and biogeography. Acceleration data approximated a thermal performance curve, with activity peaking at 23 degrees C but declining rapidly at higher temperatures. Gill-net catch data displayed a similar trend, with a temperature-associated increase and decrease in catch rates in temperate and tropical regions, respectively. Extrapolated estimates of zero activity (CTmin and CTmax) from the accelerometers were similar to the minimum and maximum mean monthly water temperatures experienced at the southern and northern (respectively) limits of the species distribution, consistent with performance-limited biogeography in this species. These data highlight the fundamental influence of temperature on ectotherm performance, and how thermal performance limits may shape biogeography. Biologging approaches are rarely used to examine thermal performance curves in free-ranging animals, but these may be central to understanding the tradeoffs between physiology and ecology that constrain species' biogeographies and determine the susceptibility of ectotherms to future increases in temperature
机译:理论和实验室研究通常表明,外热性能会随着温度的升高而增加,达到最佳状态,然后下降。几种生理机制可能会影响热性能曲线,但是自由放养的动物对温度变化的响应将代表这些机制与生态约束之间的折衷。来自平衡生理和生态的野生动物的热力性能数据很少,这代表了预测未来温度变化对种群影响的障碍。我们在物种地理分布的中间附近使用内部植入的加速度计,在该物种的纬度极端附近使用刺网捕获数据来量化野生捕食鱼(Platycephalus fuscus)与温度相关的活动水平。我们在已建立的热性能模型以及热性能阈值与生物地理之间的关系的背景下检查了我们的数据。加速度数据近似于热性能曲线,其活性在23摄氏度达到峰值,但在较高温度下迅速下降。网捕获数据显示出类似的趋势,在温带和热带地区,捕获率的升高与温度相关。加速度计对零活度(CTmin和CTmax)的外推估算值与物种分布的南部和北部(分别)极限处经历的最低和最高月平均水温相似,这与该物种的性能受到限制的生物地理学一致。这些数据突出了温度对等温线性能的基本影响,以及热性能极限如何影响生物地理。生物测井方法很少用于检查自由放养动物的热性能曲线,但对于理解限制物种生物地理学并确定等温线对未来温度升高的敏感性的生理学和生态学之间的权衡,这些方法可能是至关重要的

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