Thermal performance of Aedes sierrensis life history traits for populations collected across the species range
Authors/Creators
- 1. University of California, Berkeley
- 2. Stanford University
Description
How mosquitoes may respond to rapid climate warming remains unknown for most species, but will have major consequences for their future distributions, with cascading impacts on human well-being, biodiversity, and ecosystem function. We investigated the adaptive potential of a wide-ranging mosquito species, Aedes sierrensis, across a large climatic gradient by conducting a common garden experiment measuring the thermal limits of mosquito life history traits. Although field-collected populations originated from vastly different thermal environments that spanned over 1,200 km, we found limited variation in upper thermal tolerance between populations. In particular, the upper thermal limits of all life history traits varied by <3°C across the species range and, for most traits, did not differ significantly between populations. For one life history trait—pupal development rate—we did detect significant variation in upper thermal limits between populations, and this variation was strongly correlated with source temperatures, providing evidence of local thermal adaptation for pupal development. However, we found that maximum environmental temperatures across most of the species' range already regularly exceed the highest upper thermal limits estimated under constant temperatures. This result suggests that strategies for coping with and/or avoiding thermal extremes are likely key components of current and future mosquito thermal tolerance.
Notes
Methods
This dataset pertains to life history trait measurements made on 10 populations of Aedes sierrensis collected from across western North America. Mosquitoes were held at six tempreature treatments, and life history traits (larval and pupal survival and development rates, and adult lifespan) were made through tracking individuals daily. This data was used to obtain estimates of thermal limits for each population and trait using Bayesian analysis. Further details of mosquito collection, rearing, data collection, processing, and analysis are available in the manuscript, as well as a preprint: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.03.02.530886v2
Files
LifeHistoryData_PreProcessing.csv
Files
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Additional details
Related works
- Is cited by
- 10.1101/2023.03.02.530886 (DOI)
- Is derived from
- 10.5281/zenodo.10365768 (DOI)