A Theoretical Thermal Tolerance Function for Ectothermic Animals and Its Implications for Identifying Thermal Vulnerability across Large Geographic Scales

Agustín Camacho*, Michael J. Angilletta, Ofir Levy

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

The time-to-thermal-death curve, or thermal death curve, seeks to represent all the combinations of exposure time and temperature that kill individuals of a species. We present a new theoretical function to describe that time in lizards based on traditional measures of thermal tolerance (i.e., preferred body temperatures, voluntary thermal maximum, and the critical thermal maximum). We evaluated the utility of this function in two ways. Firstly, we compared thermal death curves among four species of lizards for which enough data are available. Secondly, we compared the geography of predicted thermal vulnerability based on the thermal death curve. We found that the time to loss of function or death may evolve independently from the critical thermal limits. Moreover, the traditional parameters predicted fewer deleterious sites, systematically situated at lower latitudes and closer to large water bodies (lakes or the coast). Our results highlight the urgency of accurately characterizing thermal tolerance across species to reach a less biased perception of the geography of climatic vulnerability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number680
JournalDiversity
Volume15
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2023

Funding

FundersFunder number
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme897901
FAPESP-BEPE19/07090–1

    Keywords

    • climatic vulnerability
    • critical thermal maximum
    • preferred temperatures
    • thermal limits
    • time-to-death curve
    • voluntary thermal maximum

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