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Effects of experimental warming on survival,phenology, and morphology of an aquatic insect (Odonata)
Authors:SHANNON J MCCAULEY  JOHN I HAMMOND  DACHIN N FRANCES  KAREN E MABRY
Institution:1. Department of Biology, University of Toronto Mississauga, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada;2. Department of Biological Sciences, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, U.S.A;3. Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A;4. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;5. Department of Biology, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, U.S.A
Abstract:1. Organisms can respond to changing climatic conditions in multiple ways including changes in phenology, body size or morphology, and range shifts. Understanding how developmental temperatures affect insect life‐history timing and morphology is crucial because body size and morphology affect multiple aspects of life history, including dispersal ability, whereas phenology can shape population performance and community interactions. 2. It was experimentally assessed how developmental temperatures experienced by aquatic larvae affected survival, phenology, and adult morphology of dragonflies Pachydiplax longipennis (Burmeister)]. Larvae were reared under three environmental temperatures: ambient, +2.5, and +5 °C, corresponding to temperature projections for our study area 50 and 100 years in the future, respectively. Experimental temperature treatments tracked naturally‐occurring variation. 3. Clear effects of temperature were found in the rearing environment on survival and phenology: dragonflies reared at the highest temperatures had the lowest survival rates and emerged from the larval stage approximately 3 weeks earlier than animals reared at ambient temperatures. There was no effect of rearing temperature on overall body size. Although neither the relative wing nor thorax size was affected by warming, a non‐significant trend towards an interaction between sex and warming in relative thorax size suggests that males may be more sensitive to warming than females, a pattern that should be investigated further. 4. Warming strongly affected survival in the larval stage and the phenology of adult emergence. Understanding how warming in the developmental environment affects later life‐history stages is critical to interpreting the consequences of warming for organismal performance.
Keywords:Freshwater systems  larvae  Libellulidae  Pachydiplax  thermal performance
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