Thermal niche partitioning in the grasshoppers Arphia conspersa and Trimerotropis suffusa from a montane habitat in central Colorado |
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Authors: | J. E. GILLIS KURT W. POSSAI |
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Affiliation: | Biology Department, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT. - 1 Two species of grasshoppers, Arphia conspersa and Trimerotropis suffusa, coexist in a montane habitat in central Colorado.
- 2 Field-recordings of body temperature revealed that A.conspersa has a significantly lower mean body temperature (Tb), sexual display temperature (Td) and minimum flying temperature (MFT) than T.suffusa.
- 3 A test of the maximum voluntarily tolerated temperature (MVT) showed that T.suffusa has a higher MVT than A.conspersa.
- 4 Thermal niche breadth, as indexed by the difference between MVT and MFT and the range of environmental temperatures over which each species is active, is broader in the eurythermic A.conspersa than in the stenothermic T. suffusa.
- 5 Thermoregulatory ability, as evaluated by regression analysis of Tb on Ta, was shown to be better in T.suffusa than in A.conspersa and in displaying grasshoppers of both species than in non-displaying ones. The significance of these findings with respect to a cost-benefit model of behavioural thermoregulation in ectotherms is discussed.
- 6 Based on these data and observations it was concluded that A.conspersa and T.suffusa occupy different thermal niches and that thermal considerations may be importantly related to habitat preference, daily activity patterns, and consequent ecological separation.
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Keywords: | Thermoregulation grasshoppers thermal niche temperature behavioural temperature regulation |
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