Data from: Latitudinal embryonic thermal tolerance and plasticity shape the vulnerability of oviparous species to climate change
Heat tolerance at the immobile embryonic stage is expected to be critical in determining species vulnerability to climate change. However, how the mean and developmental plasticity of embryonic heat tolerance vary geographically, and how these geographic variations affect species’ vulnerability unde...
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Zusammenfassung: | Heat tolerance at the immobile embryonic stage is expected to be critical
in determining species vulnerability to climate change. However, how the
mean and developmental plasticity of embryonic heat tolerance vary
geographically, and how these geographic variations affect species’
vulnerability under climate change remain unknown. We experimentally
determined the mean and developmental plasticity of embryonic acute heat
tolerance (EAHT, i.e., heat shock temperature at which embryonic
heartbeats ceased) for three latitudinally-distributed populations of an
oviparous lacertid lizard. The experimental results suggested that the
mean EAHT decreased with decreasing latitude and that the reaction norms
of EAHT in relation to developmental temperatures showed ‘flat’,
‘bell-shaped’, and ‘decreasing’ patterns at high, medium, and low
latitudes, respectively. Based on the means and plasticity of EAHT and
weather data across China, we project that the heat stress frequency would
increase from present to the future and increase towards low latitudes.
Furthermore, heat stress becomes more extensive with the incorporation of
developmental plasticity. Incorporating the mean EAHT during the embryonic
development season, heat stress frequency, and climate variables in a
species distribution model projects that suitable habitats could move
northward in response to ongoing climate change and shrink due to the loss
of southern habitat. Moreover, even lizards within the areas that are
predicted to remain highly suitable are expected to experience increases
in heat stress over time, particularly at medium and low latitudes. Our
study reveals geographic variation in the mean and developmental
plasticity of EAHT and highlights its importance for predicting species
vulnerability and range shifts in response to climate change. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.bk3j9kdbk |