Variation in Thermal Sensitivity and Thermal Tolerances in an Invasive Species across a Climatic Gradient: Lessons from the Land Snail Cornu aspersum

被引:66
作者
Diego Gaitan-Espitia, Juan [1 ,2 ]
Belen Arias, Maria [3 ]
Lardies, Marco A. [3 ,4 ]
Nespolo, Roberto F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Austral Chile, Inst Ciencias Ambientales & Evolut, Valdivia, Chile
[2] Univ Austral Chile, Fac Ciencias, Programa Doctorado Ciencias Menc Ecol & Evoluc, Valdivia, Chile
[3] Univ Adolfo Ibanez, Fac Artes Liberales, Dept Ciencias, Santiago, Chile
[4] Univ Adolfo Ibanez, Dept Ciencias, Fac Ingn & Ciencias, Santiago, Chile
关键词
HEAT-SHOCK PROTEINS; REACTION NORMS; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; LOCOMOTOR PERFORMANCE; MOLECULAR CHAPERONES; GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION; MOUNTAIN PASSES; GENE-EXPRESSION; RECOVERY-TIME; CHILL-COMA;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0070662
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The ability of organisms to perform at different temperatures could be described by a continuous nonlinear reaction norm (i.e., thermal performance curve, TPC), in which the phenotypic trait value varies as a function of temperature. Almost any shift in the parameters of this performance curve could highlight the direct effect of temperature on organism fitness, providing a powerful framework for testing thermal adaptation hypotheses. Inter-and intraspecific differences in this performance curve are also reflected in thermal tolerances limits (e. g., critical and lethal limits), influencing the biogeographic patterns of species' distribution. Within this context, here we investigated the intraspecific variation in thermal sensitivities and thermal tolerances in three populations of the invasive snail Cornu aspersum across a geographical gradient, characterized by different climatic conditions. Thus, we examined population differentiation in the TPCs, thermal-coma recovery times, expression of heat-shock proteins and standard metabolic rate (i.e., energetic costs of physiological differentiation). We tested two competing hypotheses regarding thermal adaptation (the "hotter is better" and the generalist-specialist trade-offs). Our results show that the differences in thermal sensitivity among populations of C. aspersum follow a latitudinal pattern, which is likely the result of a combination of thermodynamic constraints ("hotter is better") and thermal adaptations to their local environments (generalist-specialist trade-offs). This finding is also consistent with some thermal tolerance indices such as the Heat-Shock Protein Response and the recovery time from chill-coma. However, mixed responses in the evaluated traits suggest that thermal adaptation in this species is not complete, as we were not able to detect any differences in neither energetic costs of physiological differentiation among populations, nor in the heat-coma recovery.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 94 条
[1]   A bioclimatic classification of Chile: woodland communities in the temperate zone [J].
Amigo, J ;
Ramirez, C .
PLANT ECOLOGY, 1998, 136 (01) :9-26
[2]   Incorporating Population-Level Variation in Thermal Performance into Predictions of Geographic Range Shifts [J].
Angert, Amy L. ;
Sheth, Seema N. ;
Paul, John R. .
INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2011, 51 (05) :733-750
[3]   Estimating and comparing thermal performance curves [J].
Angilletta, Michael J., Jr. .
JOURNAL OF THERMAL BIOLOGY, 2006, 31 (07) :541-545
[4]   Thermodynamic Effects on Organismal Performance: Is Hotter Better? [J].
Angilletta, Michael J., Jr. ;
Huey, Raymond B. ;
Frazier, Melanie R. .
PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY, 2010, 83 (02) :197-206
[5]  
Angilletta MJ, 2009, BIO HABIT, P1, DOI 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198570875.001.1
[6]   Elements of cold hardiness in a littoral population of the land snail Helix aspersa (Gastropoda: Pulmonata) [J].
Ansart, A ;
Vernon, P ;
Daguzan, J .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY B-BIOCHEMICAL SYSTEMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 172 (07) :619-625
[7]   Thermodynamic Effects on the Evolution of Performance Curves [J].
Asbury, Dee A. ;
Angilletta, Michael J., Jr. .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2010, 176 (02) :E40-E49
[8]  
Barker G.M., 2001, P1, DOI 10.1079/9780851993188.0001
[9]   HEAT-SHOCK PROTEINS AS MOLECULAR CHAPERONES [J].
BECKER, J ;
CRAIG, EA .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1994, 219 (1-2) :11-23
[10]   Plasticity of life-cycle, physiological thermal traits and Hsp70 gene expression in an insect along the ontogeny: Effect of temperature variability [J].
Belen Arias, Maria ;
Josefina Poupin, Maria ;
Lardies, Marco A. .
JOURNAL OF THERMAL BIOLOGY, 2011, 36 (06) :355-362