Temperate species underfill their tropical thermal potentials on land

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  • Nikki A. Moore
  • Ignacio Morales-Castilla
  • Anna L. Hargreaves
  • Miguel Ángel Olalla-Tárraga
  • Fabricio Villalobos
  • Piero Calosi
  • Susana Clusella-Trullas
  • Juan G. Rubalcaba
  • Adam C. Algar
  • Brezo Martínez
  • Laura Rodríguez
  • Sarah Gravel
  • Joanne M. Bennett
  • Greta C. Vega
  • Rahbek, Carsten
  • Miguel B. Araújo
  • Joey R. Bernhardt
  • Jennifer M. Sunday

Understanding how temperature determines the distribution of life is necessary to assess species’ sensitivities to contemporary climate change. Here, we test the importance of temperature in limiting the geographic ranges of ectotherms by comparing the temperatures and areas that species occupy to the temperatures and areas species could potentially occupy on the basis of their physiological thermal tolerances. We find that marine species across all latitudes and terrestrial species from the tropics occupy temperatures that closely match their thermal tolerances. However, terrestrial species from temperate and polar latitudes are absent from warm, thermally tolerable areas that they could potentially occupy beyond their equatorward range limits, indicating that extreme temperature is often not the factor limiting their distributions at lower latitudes. This matches predictions from the hypothesis that adaptation to cold environments that facilitates survival in temperate and polar regions is associated with a performance trade-off that reduces species’ abilities to contend in the tropics, possibly due to biotic exclusion. Our findings predict more direct responses to climate warming of marine ranges and cool range edges of terrestrial species.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftNature Ecology and Evolution
Vol/bind7
Udgave nummer12
Sider (fra-til)1993-2003
ISSN2397-334X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We are grateful for contributions to geographic range validation by R. M. Lima. This paper is a joint effort of the working group sWEEP supported by sDiv, the Synthesis Centre of iDiv (grant no. DFG FZT 118, 202548816). This work was also supported by grants from: the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (grants to N.A.M. and J.M.S., grant no. 2020-05627 to P.C.); the Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science (to N.A.M.); the Rubin Gruber Science Undergraduate Research Award (to N.A.M.); the Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation (grant no. PID2019-109711RJ-I00 to I.M.-C.); the Comunidad de Madrid and University of Alcalá (grant no. CM/BG/2021-003 to I.M.-C.); the CONAHCyT and INECOL (to F.V.); the European Commission’s Marie-Skłodowska Curie Individual Fellowship (no. H2020-MSCA-IF-2018, 843094 to J.G.R.).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).

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