Data from: Long-term, high frequency in situ measurements of intertidal mussel bed temperatures using biomimetic sensors
At a proximal level, the physiological impacts of global climate change on ectothermic organisms are manifest as changes in body temperatures. Especially for plants and animals exposed to direct solar radiation, body temperatures can be substantially different from air temperatures. We deployed biom...
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Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | At a proximal level, the physiological impacts of global climate change on
ectothermic organisms are manifest as changes in body temperatures.
Especially for plants and animals exposed to direct solar radiation, body
temperatures can be substantially different from air temperatures. We
deployed biomimetic sensors that approximate the thermal characteristics
of intertidal mussels at 71 sites worldwide, from 1998-present. Loggers
recorded temperatures at 10–30 min intervals nearly continuously at
multiple intertidal elevations. Comparisons against direct measurements of
mussel tissue temperature indicated errors of ~2.0–2.5 °C, during daily
fluctuations that often exceeded 15°–20 °C. Geographic patterns in thermal
stress based on biomimetic logger measurements were generally far more
complex than anticipated based only on ‘habitat-level’ measurements of air
or sea surface temperature. This unique data set provides an opportunity
to link physiological measurements with spatially- and temporally-explicit
field observations of body temperature. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.6n8kf |