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The relationship between the body and air temperature in a terrestrial ectotherm.

Alexandra S GardnerIlya M D MacleanRolando Rodríguez-MuñozPaul E HopwoodKali MillsRoss WotherspoonTom Tregenza
Published in: Ecology and evolution (2024)
Ectotherms make up the majority of terrestrial biodiversity, so it is important to understand their potential responses to climate change. Often, models aiming to achieve this understanding correlate species distributions with ambient air temperature. However, this assumes a constant relationship between the air temperature and body temperature, which determines an ectotherm's thermal performance. To test this assumption, we develop and validate a method for retrospective estimation of ectotherm body temperature using heat exchange equations. We apply the model to predict the body temperature of wild field crickets ( Gryllus campestris ) in Northern Spain for 1985-2019 and compare these values to air temperature. We show that while air temperature impacts ectotherm body temperature, it captures only a fraction of its thermal experience. Solar radiation can increase the body temperature by more than 20°C above air temperature with implications for physiology and behaviour. The effect of solar radiation on body temperature is particularly important given that climate change will alter cloud cover. Our study shows that the impacts of climate change on species cannot be assumed to be proportional only to changing air temperature. More reliable models of future species distributions require mechanistic links between environmental conditions and thermal ecophysiologies of species.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • particulate matter
  • air pollution
  • genetic diversity
  • heat stress
  • current status