Adjusting to climate: Acclimation, adaptation and developmental plasticity in physiological traits of a tropical rainforest lizard

Date

2018

Authors

Llewelyn, J.
Macdonald, Stewart L.
Moritz, Craig
de Mello Martins, Felipe
Hatcher, Amberlee
Phillips, Ben L.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Abstract

The impact of climate change may be felt most keenly by tropical ectotherms. In these taxa, it is argued, thermal specialisation means a given shift in temperature will have a larger effect on fitness. For species with limited dispersal ability, the impact of climate change depends on the capacity for their climate-relevant traits to shift. Such shifts can occur through genetic adaptation, various forms of plasticity, or a combination of these processes. Here we assess the extent and causes of shifts in seven physiological traits in a tropical lizard, the rainforest sunskink (Lampropholis coggeri). Two populations were sampled that differ from each other in both climate and physiological traits. We compared trait values in each animal soon after field collection versus following acclimation to laboratory conditions. We also compared trait values between populations in: (1) recently field-collected animals, (2) the same animals following laboratory acclimation, and (3) the laboratory-reared offspring of these animals. Our results reveal high trait lability, driven primarily by acclimation and local adaptation. By contrast, developmental plasticity, resulting from incubation temperature, had little-to-no effect on most traits. These results suggest that, while specialised, tropical ectotherms may be capable of rapid shifts in climate-relevant traits.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Integrative Zoology Online

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31