Climate change-driven body size shrinking in a social wasp

被引:27
作者
Polidori, Carlo [1 ]
Gutierrez-Canovas, Cayltano [2 ]
Sanchez, Enrique [3 ]
Tormos, Jose [4 ]
Castro, Leopoldo [5 ]
Sanchez-Fernandez, David [1 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Castilla La Mancha, Inst Ciencias Ambientales ICAM, Ave Carlos III S-N, Toledo 45071, Spain
[2] Univ Barcelona, Fac Biol, Inst Recerca Biodiversitat IRBio, Grup Recerca Freshwater Ecol & Management FEM,Dep, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Univ Castilla La Mancha, Fac Environm Sci & Biochem, Toledo, Spain
[4] Univ Salamanca, Fac Biol, Unidad Zool, Salamanca, Spain
[5] Ave Sagunto 44,6-5a, Teruel, Spain
[6] Univ Murcia, Dept Ecol & Hidrol, Murcia, Spain
关键词
Body size; Dolichovespula sylvestris; global warming; Spain; wing loading; EVOLUTIONARY RESPONSES; ECOLOGICAL RESPONSES; LATITUDINAL CLINES; FLIGHT MORPHOLOGY; BERGMANNS RULE; RANGE SHIFTS; ALLENS RULE; HYMENOPTERA; BEES; IMPACTS;
D O I
10.1111/een.12781
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
1. Climate change is expected to produce shifts in species distributions as well as behavioural, life-history, and/or morphological adaptations to find suitable conditions or cope with the altered environment. Most of our knowledge on this issue comes from studies on vertebrates, mainly endotherm species. However, it remains uncertain how small ectotherms, such as insects, respond to increased temperature. 2. This study tested whether climate change over the last 100 years (1904-2013) has affected morphological and functional traits in workers of the social wasp Dolichovespula sylvestris in the Iberian Peninsula. 3. Head width and forewing length, as well as body mass and wing area (assuming no change in shape), decreased over time and with increased mean annual temperature, even when controlling for geographical location and altitude. Interestingly, wing size decreased with a steeper slope compared with body size. If there is no change in wing shape, this would lead to an invariable wing loading (body mass:wing area ratio) over time, with potential consequences on flying ability of more recent (and thus smaller) wasp individuals. 4. These results suggest that recent climate change is leaving morphological signatures in social wasps, increasing the evidence for this phenomenon in insects. The data furthermore suggest that the known efficient thermoregulatory ability of social insect colonies may not successfully buffer the effect of global warming.
引用
收藏
页码:130 / 141
页数:12
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