Published February 23, 2011 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Climatic predictors of temperature performance curve parameters in ectotherms imply complex responses to climate change

Description

Determining organismal responses to climate change is one of biology's greatest challenges. Recent forecasts for future climates emphasize altered temperature variation and precipitation, but most studies of animals have largely focussed on forecasting the outcome of changes in mean temperature. Theory suggests that extreme thermal variation and precipitation will influence species performance, and hence affect their response to changes in climate. Using an information-theoretic approach, we show that in squamate ectotherms (mostly lizards and snakes), two fitness-influencing components of performance, the critical thermal maximum and the thermal optimum, are more closely related to temperature variation and to precipitation, respectively, than either is to mean thermal conditions. By contrast, critical thermal minimum is related to mean annual temperature. Our results suggest that temperature variation and precipitation regimes have had a strong influence on the evolution of ectotherm performance, so that forecasts for animal responses to climate change will have to incorporate these factors, and not only changes in average temperature.

Notes

Files

Corr_matrices.pdf

Files (371.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:31aa536087b70c9bf76a617cd17eb60c
46.8 kB Preview Download
md5:2e263f189499a3134fd7ddbf27fea8bc
3.1 kB Preview Download
md5:f90073ecbca789cfaa9f26e98b1c385f
28.6 kB Preview Download
md5:8af0f0fe685f53b6ba36574281445f3f
171.5 kB Preview Download
md5:308e9c0bfaa51828f79a3398f34c1dfb
44.9 kB Preview Download
md5:737d7bee15f5ec2a1c03673ca5258f11
76.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1086/660021 (DOI)