4.3 Article

Does greater thermal plasticity facilitate range expansion of an invasive terrestrial anuran into higher latitudes?

Journal

CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/conphys/cov010

Keywords

Aerobic scope; cane toad; invasive species; metabolic rate; Rhinella marina; thermal plasticity

Funding

  1. University of Queensland
  2. ARC

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Temperature has pervasive effects on physiological processes and is critical in setting species distribution limits. Since invading Australia, cane toads have spread rapidly across low latitudes, but slowly into higher latitudes. Low temperature is the likely factor limiting high-latitude advancement. Several previous attempts have been made to predict future cane toad distributions in Australia, but understanding the potential contribution of phenotypic plasticity and adaptation to future range expansion remains challenging. Previous research demonstrates the considerable thermal metabolic plasticity of the cane toad, but suggests limited thermal plasticity of locomotor performance. Additionally, the oxygen-limited thermal tolerance hypothesis predicts that reduced aerobic scope sets thermal limits for ectotherm performance. Metabolic plasticity, locomotor performance and aerobic scope are therefore predicted targets of natural selection as cane toads invade colder regions. We measured these traits at temperatures of 10, 15, 22.5 and 30 degrees C in low- and high-latitude toads acclimated to 15 and 30 degrees C, to test the hypothesis that cane toads have adapted to cooler temperatures. High-latitude toads show increased metabolic plasticity and higher resting metabolic rates at lower temperatures. Burst locomotor performance was worse for high-latitude toads. Other traits showed no regional differences. We conclude that increased metabolic plasticity may facilitate invasion into higher latitudes by maintaining critical physiological functions at lower temperatures.

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