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Thermal-safety margins and the necessity of thermoregulatory behavior across latitude and elevation
Edited by James H. Brown, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, and approved February 3, 2014 (received for review August 31, 2013)

Significance
We find that most terrestrial ectotherms are insufficiently tolerant of high temperatures to survive the warmest potential body temperatures in exposed habitats and must therefore thermoregulate by using shade, burrows, or evaporative cooling. Our results reveal that exposure to extreme heat can occur even at high elevations and latitudes and show why heat-tolerance limits are relatively invariant in comparison with cold limits. To survive climate warming, ectotherms in most areas may need to rely on behaviors—and have access to habitats—that provide a reprieve from extreme operative temperatures.
Abstract
Physiological thermal-tolerance limits of terrestrial ectotherms often exceed local air temperatures, implying a high degree of thermal safety (an excess of warm or cold thermal tolerance). However, air temperatures can be very different from the equilibrium body temperature of an individual ectotherm. Here, we compile thermal-tolerance limits of ectotherms across a wide range of latitudes and elevations and compare these thermal limits both to air and to operative body temperatures (theoretically equilibrated body temperatures) of small ectothermic animals during the warmest and coldest times of the year. We show that extreme operative body temperatures in exposed habitats match or exceed the physiological thermal limits of most ectotherms. Therefore, contrary to previous findings using air temperatures, most ectotherms do not have a physiological thermal-safety margin. They must therefore rely on behavior to avoid overheating during the warmest times, especially in the lowland tropics. Likewise, species living at temperate latitudes and in alpine habitats must retreat to avoid lethal cold exposure. Behavioral plasticity of habitat use and the energetic consequences of thermal retreats are therefore critical aspects of species’ vulnerability to climate warming and extreme events.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sunday{at}zoology.ubc.ca.
Author contributions: J.M.S., A.E.B., R.K.C., N.K.D., J.T.L., and R.B.H. designed research; J.M.S. and A.E.B. performed research; A.E.B. and M.R.K. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; J.M.S., A.E.B., and R.B.H. analyzed data; and J.M.S., A.E.B., M.R.K., R.K.C., N.K.D., J.T.L., and R.B.H. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1316145111/-/DCSupplemental.
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