Title
Divergence of thermal physiological traits in terrestrial breeding frogs along a tropical elevational gradient
Date Issued
01 May 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Universidad del Sur de Illinois Carbondale
Publisher(s)
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Abstract
Critical thermal limits are thought to be correlated with the elevational distribution of species living in tropical montane regions, but with upper limits being relatively invariant compared to lower limits. To test this hypothesis, we examined the variation of thermal physiological traits in a group of terrestrial breeding frogs (Craugastoridae) distributed along a tropical elevational gradient. We measured the critical thermal maximum (CTmax; n = 22 species) and critical thermal minimum (CTmin; n = 14 species) of frogs captured between the Amazon floodplain (250 m asl) and the high Andes (3,800 m asl). After inferring a multilocus species tree, we conducted a phylogenetically informed test of whether body size, body mass, and elevation contributed to the observed variation in CTmax and CTmin along the gradient. We also tested whether CTmax and CTmin exhibit different rates of change given that critical thermal limits (and their plasticity) may have evolved differently in response to different temperature constraints along the gradient. Variation of critical thermal traits was significantly correlated with species’ elevational midpoint, their maximum and minimum elevations, as well as the maximum air temperature and the maximum operative temperature as measured across this gradient. Both thermal limits showed substantial variation, but CTmin exhibited relatively faster rates of change than CTmax, as observed in other taxa. Nonetheless, our findings call for caution in assuming inflexibility of upper thermal limits and underscore the value of collecting additional empirical data on species’ thermal physiology across elevational gradients.
Start page
3257
End page
3267
Volume
7
Issue
9
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología reproductiva Conservación de la Biodiversidad Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85017351837
Source
Ecology and Evolution
ISSN of the container
20457758
Sponsor(s)
Permits were issued by the administration of Manu National Park (N° 06-2013-SERNANP-PNM-JEF) and the Servicio Nacional Forestal y de Fauna Silvestre (N° 27 C/C-2007-INRENA-IANP, 49 C/C-2007-INRENA-IANP, 11-2008-INRENA-IFFS-DCB, 120-2012-AG-DGFFS-DGEFFS, 064-2013-AG-DGFFS-DGEFFS, 292-2014-AG-DGFFS-DGEFFS, R.D.G. No 029-2016-SERFOR-DGGSPFFS, R.D.G. 405-2016-SERFOR-DGGSPFFS, and Contrato de Acceso Marco a Recursos Genéticos, N° 359-2013-MINAGRI-DGFFS-DGEFFS). Use of vertebrate animals was approved by the Animal Care and Use committees of the University of California (ACUC #R278-0412, R278-0413, and R278-0314) and Southern Illinois University (IACUC #13-027 and 14-011). We thank J.C. Jahuanchi, J.C. Cusi, park rangers, students, and colleagues who assisted in fieldwork. We thank D.B. Wake, J. McGuire, D. Rabosky, two anonymous reviewers, and the members of the Moritz, McGuire, and Rabosky Labs for providing helpful comments and suggestions. We also thank J. Mitchell, V. Remes, S. Singhal, and M. Muñoz for providing some of the scripts used in the analyses. Research was supported with grants from the National Science Foundation (Postdoctoral Research Fellowship DBI-1103087), the American Philosophical Society, and the National Geographic Society Committee for Research and Exploration (Grant # 9191-12) to RvM; the Amazon Conservation Association to RvM and A. Catenazzi; and the Swiss National Science Foundation (#116305), the Rufford Small Grants Foundation, the Chicago Board of Trade Endangered Species Fund, the Amphibian Specialist Group, and the Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund to A. Catenazzi. A. Carnaval acknowledges funding by NSF (DEB 1120487 and 1343578).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus