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Divergence of thermal physiological traits in terrestrial breeding frogs along a tropical elevational gradient
Authors:Rudolf von May  Alessandro Catenazzi  Ammon Corl  Roy Santa‐Cruz  Ana Carolina Carnaval  Craig Moritz
Affiliation:1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA;2. Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA;3. Department of Zoology, Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Carbondale, IL, USA;4. área de Herpetología, Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional de San Agustín (MUSA), Arequipa, Perú;5. Department of Biology, The City University of New York, New York, NY, USA;6. Centre for Biodiversity Analysis and Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia
Abstract:Critical thermal limits are thought to be correlated with the elevational distribution of species living in tropical montane regions, but with upper limits being relatively invariant compared to lower limits. To test this hypothesis, we examined the variation of thermal physiological traits in a group of terrestrial breeding frogs (Craugastoridae) distributed along a tropical elevational gradient. We measured the critical thermal maximum (CTmax; n = 22 species) and critical thermal minimum (CTmin; n = 14 species) of frogs captured between the Amazon floodplain (250 m asl) and the high Andes (3,800 m asl). After inferring a multilocus species tree, we conducted a phylogenetically informed test of whether body size, body mass, and elevation contributed to the observed variation in CTmax and CTmin along the gradient. We also tested whether CTmax and CTmin exhibit different rates of change given that critical thermal limits (and their plasticity) may have evolved differently in response to different temperature constraints along the gradient. Variation of critical thermal traits was significantly correlated with species’ elevational midpoint, their maximum and minimum elevations, as well as the maximum air temperature and the maximum operative temperature as measured across this gradient. Both thermal limits showed substantial variation, but CTmin exhibited relatively faster rates of change than CTmax, as observed in other taxa. Nonetheless, our findings call for caution in assuming inflexibility of upper thermal limits and underscore the value of collecting additional empirical data on species’ thermal physiology across elevational gradients.
Keywords:Amazon  Andes  critical thermal limits  CTmax  CTmin  physiological divergence
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