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Using Physiology to Predict the Responses of Ants to Climatic Warming

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Sarah E Diamond, Clint A Penick, Shannon L Pelini, Aaron M Ellison, Nicholas J Gotelli, Nathan J Sanders, and Robert R Dunn, 2013-11, Using Physiology to Predict the Responses of Ants to Climatic Warming: Integrative and Comparative Biology.

Summary

Physiological intolerance of high temperatures places limits on organismal responses to the temperature increases associated with global climatic change. Because ants are geographically widespread, ecologically diverse, and thermophilic, they are an ideal system for exploring the extent to which physiological tolerance can predict responses to environmental change. Here, we expand on simple models that use thermal tolerance to predict the responses of ants to climatic warming. We investigated the degree to which changes in the abundance of ants under warming reflect reductions in the thermal niche space for their foraging. In an eastern deciduous forest system in the United States with approximately 40 ant species, we found that for [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southeast CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalIntegrative and Comparative Biology

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