(Press-News.org) Climate change may even test lizards' famous ability to tolerate and escape the heat -- making habitat protection increasingly vital -- according to a new study by UBC and international biodiversity experts.
The study, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, looks at the heat and cold tolerance of 296 species of reptiles, insects and amphibians, known as ectotherms. The researchers discovered that regardless of latitude or elevation, cold-blooded animals across the world have similar heat tolerance limits. However, species in the tropics rely more on behaviour to survive, burrowing or finding shade to shield themselves from the sun.
"By comparing temperature tolerance limits to estimated body temperatures of animals exposed to the sun, we've found that species at low latitudes rely on shade and habitat," says UBC climate-change ecologist Jennifer Sunday, lead author on the paper. "Very few species have any extra heat tolerance."
As the world warms, most ectotherms will rely increasingly on behavioral thermoregulation, making it vital to protect migration corridors and habitats that provide shade, especially in the tropics.
"We know that a lot of organisms could exist if they spent many hours in a burrow, but we also know that they can't spend all their time hiding from the sun," says Sunday. "We will have to determine their limitations."
Sunday recommends future research focus on the availability of shade habitat and the energetic consequences of the behavioral changes that climate change may cause in the species.
INFORMATION:
More information: Article #13-16145: "Thermal safety margins and the necessity of thermoregulatory behavior across latitude and elevation," by Jennifer M. Sunday et al.
Contacts:
Jennifer Sunday
Post-doctoral Research Fellow
Biodiversity Research Centre
University of British Columbia
Phone: (604) 789-1997
sunday@zoology.ubc.ca
http://www.zoology.ubc.ca/~sunday/
Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Coordinator, Communications
Faculty of Science
Phone: (604) 827-5001
silvia.moreno-garcia@science.ubc.ca
Shade will be a precious resource to lizards in a warming world
2014-03-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A tale of 2 data sets: New DNA analysis strategy helps researchers cut through the dirt
2014-03-10
For soil microbiology, it is the best of times. While no one has undertaken an accurate census, a spoonful of soil holds hundreds of billions of microbial cells, encompassing thousands of species. "It's one of the most diverse microbial habitats on Earth, yet we know surprisingly little about the identities and functions of the microbes inhabiting soil," said Jim Tiedje, Distinguished Professor at the Center for Microbial Ecology at Michigan State University. Tiedje, along with MSU colleagues and collaborators from the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE ...
Mecasermin (rh-IGF-1) treatment for Rett Syndrome is safe and well-tolerated
2014-03-10
(Cincinnati, OH) – The results from Boston Children's Hospital's Phase 1 human clinical trial in Rett syndrome came out today. A team of investigators successfully completed a Phase 1 clinical trial using mecasermin [recombinant human insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1)], showing proof-of-principle that treatments like IGF-1 which are based on the neurobiology of Rett syndrome, are possible. The study deemed that IGF-1 is safe and well tolerated in girls diagnosed with Rett syndrome, and the data also suggests that certain breathing and behavioral symptoms associated ...
National study reveals urban lawn care habits
2014-03-10
(Millbrook, NY) What do people living in Boston, Baltimore, Miami, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Phoenix, and Los Angeles have in common? From coast to coast, prairie to desert – residential lawns reign.
But, according to a new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, beneath this sea of green lie unexpected differences in fertilization and irrigation practices. Understanding urban lawn care is vital to sustainability planning, more than 80% of Americans live in cities and their suburbs, and these numbers continue to grow.
The study was undertaken to ...
Lower IQ in teen years increases risk of early-onset dementia
2014-03-10
Men who at the age of 18 years have poorer cardiovascular fitness and/or a lower IQ more often suffer from dementia before the age of 60. This is shown in a recent study encompassing more than one million Swedish men.
In several extensive studies, researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy of Gothenburg University have previously analyzed Swedish men's conscription results and were able to show a correlation between cardiovascular fitness as a teenager and health problems in later life.
Increased risk for early-onset dementia
In their latest study, based on data from 1.1 ...
Some characteristics increase the likelihood of getting married and living together
2014-03-10
CORAL GABLES, FL (March 10, 2014) -- When it comes to romantic relationships, attributes such as health, kindness, and social status have been shown to be important qualities in choosing a partner. It may be surprising to learn, however, that certain personal traits predispose a person towards either getting married or forming a cohabitating relationship.
According to a study recently published in the journal Social Science Research, scoring high on attractiveness, personality, and grooming is associated with a greater probability of entering into a marital relationship ...
A shocking diet
2014-03-10
There have been plenty of fad diets that captured the public's imagination over the years, but Harvard scientists have identified what may be the strangest of them all – sunlight and electricity.
Led by Peter Girguis, the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Natural Sciences, and Arpita Bose, a post-doctoral fellow in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, a team of researchers showed that the commonly found bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris can use natural conductivity to pull electrons from minerals located deep in soil and sediment while remaining at the surface, ...
Ben-Gurion U. researchers identify severe genetic disease prevalent in Moroccan Jews
2014-03-10
BEER-SHEVA, Israel, March 10, 2014 - Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers have unraveled the genetic basis of a hereditary disease that causes severe brain atrophy, mental retardation and epilepsy in Jews of Moroccan ancestry, according to a study published this week online in the Journal of Medical Genetics.
The disease, which the researchers have called PCCA2 (Progressive Cerebello-Cerebral Atrophy Type 2), is caused by two mutations in the VPS53 gene. It results in defective circulation of vacuoles (endosomes) within patents' cells and leads to detrimental ...
Penn researchers model a key breaking point involved in traumatic brain injury
2014-03-10
Even the mildest form of a traumatic brain injury, better known as a concussion, can deal permanent, irreparable damage. Now, an interdisciplinary team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania is using mathematical modeling to better understand the mechanisms at play in this kind of injury, with an eye toward protecting the brain from its long-term consequences.
Their recent findings, published in the Biophysical Journal, shed new light on the mechanical properties of a critical brain protein and its role in the elasticity of axons, the long, tendril-like part ...
Predation on invertebrates by woodland salamanders increases carbon capture
2014-03-10
ARCATA, Calif.—Woodland salamanders perform a vital ecological service in American forests by helping to mitigate the impacts of global warming.
Global warming occurs when greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide are released into the atmosphere. Woodland salamanders facilitate the capture of this carbon before it is released by feeding on invertebrates (beetles, earthworms, snails, ants, etc.) that would otherwise release carbon through consumption of fallen leaves and other forest debris. Woodland salamanders are the most common vertebrate species in American forests; consequently, ...
Parkinson's disease: Quickly identifying patients at risk of dementia
2014-03-10
This news release is available in French. It may now be possible to identify the first-stage Parkinson's patients who will go on to develop dementia, according to a study conducted at the Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal by Dr. Oury Monchi, PhD, and his postdoctoral student, Dr. Alexandru Hanganu, MD, PhD, both of whom are affiliated with Université de Montréal. These findings were published in the journal Brain.
Although Parkinson's disease is generally associated with motor problems such as trembling or rigidity, people with this disease actually ...