Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Adaptation of biological membranes to temperature: biophysical perspectives and molecular mechanisms
- Temperature adaptation: molecular aspects
- Stenotherms and eurytherms: mechanisms establishing thermal optima and tolerance ranges
- Ecological and evolutionary physiology of stress proteins and the stress response: the Drosophila melanogaster model
- Temperature adaptation and genetic polymorphism in aquatic animals
- Phenotypic plasticity and evolutionary adaptations of mitochondria to temperature
- Temperature and ontogeny in ectotherms: muscle phenotype in fish
- Ectotherm life-history responses to developmental temperature
- Testing evolutionary hypotheses of acclimation
- Experimental investigations of evolutionary adaptation to temperature
- Thermal evolution of ectotherm body size: why get big in the cold?
- Physiological correlates of daily torpor in hummingbirds
- Development of thermoregulation in birds: physiology, interspecific variation and adaptation to climate
- Evolution of endothermy in mammals, birds and their ancestors
- The influence of climate change on the distribution and evolution of organisms
- Index
Stenotherms and eurytherms: mechanisms establishing thermal optima and tolerance ranges
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Adaptation of biological membranes to temperature: biophysical perspectives and molecular mechanisms
- Temperature adaptation: molecular aspects
- Stenotherms and eurytherms: mechanisms establishing thermal optima and tolerance ranges
- Ecological and evolutionary physiology of stress proteins and the stress response: the Drosophila melanogaster model
- Temperature adaptation and genetic polymorphism in aquatic animals
- Phenotypic plasticity and evolutionary adaptations of mitochondria to temperature
- Temperature and ontogeny in ectotherms: muscle phenotype in fish
- Ectotherm life-history responses to developmental temperature
- Testing evolutionary hypotheses of acclimation
- Experimental investigations of evolutionary adaptation to temperature
- Thermal evolution of ectotherm body size: why get big in the cold?
- Physiological correlates of daily torpor in hummingbirds
- Development of thermoregulation in birds: physiology, interspecific variation and adaptation to climate
- Evolution of endothermy in mammals, birds and their ancestors
- The influence of climate change on the distribution and evolution of organisms
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Enormous differences exist among ectothermic animals in optimal body temperatures and breadth of thermal tolerance ranges. Extreme stenothermy, coupled with cold tolerance, is exemplified by highly coldadapted notothenioid fishes of Antarctica, that have a thermal tolerance range of only about 6 °C (from the freezing point of seawater, –1.86 °C, to approximately 4 °C; Somero & DeVries, 1967; Eastman, 1993). In contrast, extreme eurythermy and heat tolerance is exhibited by fishes such as the intertidal goby Gillichthys seta, whose body temperature may range from approximately 8 °C to 40 °C, as a function of both seasonal and diurnal changes in water temperature (Dietz & Somero, 1992). The physiological, biochemical and molecular mechanisms that distinguish stenotherms and eurytherms are likely to play critical roles in establishing biogeographical patterning and in establishing the susceptibility of animals to shifts in ambient temperature, such as are predicted as a consequence of global warming.
This review compares homologous biochemical and physiological systems in stenotherms and eurytherms, and relates interspecific differences in these systems to the thermal optima and tolerance ranges characteristic of the whole organism. In keeping with a central theme of this symposium, namely, the similarities and differences found between evolutionary adaptation to temperature and short-term phenotypic acclimatisation, this review contrasts genetically-fixed traits that are important in setting thermal limits and thermal optima, with more ‘plastic’ traits that provide significantly different phenotypes under different thermal conditions.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Animals and TemperaturePhenotypic and Evolutionary Adaptation, pp. 53 - 78Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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