4.6 Review

Critical thermal limits in ants and their implications under climate change

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 97, Issue 4, Pages 1287-1305

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12843

Keywords

CTmax; CTmin; critical thermal limits; evolutionary history; Formicidae; lethal temperature; species distributions; systematic review; thermal biology

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Pernambuco [191_APQ 2020]
  2. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [307385/2020-5]
  3. FACEPE [BFP -0157-2.05/20, IBPG-0649-2.05/20]

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This article reviews research on the physiological thermal limits of ants, summarizes the factors influencing ant thermal limits, and analyzes the impact of thermal limits on ant distribution and ecological performance. The importance of protecting ant diversity and ant-mediated ecosystem services in the future is emphasized.
Critical thermal limits (CTLs) constrain the performance of organisms, shaping their abundance, current distributions, and future distributions. Consequently, CTLs may also determine the quality of ecosystem services as well as organismal and ecosystem vulnerability to climate change. As some of the most ubiquitous animals in terrestrial ecosystems, ants are important members of ecological communities. In recent years, an increasing body of research has explored ant physiological thermal limits. However, these CTL data tend to centre on a few species and biogeographical regions. To encourage an expansion of perspectives, we herein review the factors that determine ant CTLs and examine their effects on present and future species distributions and ecosystem processes. Special emphasis is placed on the implications of CTLs for safeguarding ant diversity and ant-mediated ecosystem services in the future. First, we compile, quantify, and categorise studies on ant CTLs based on study taxon, biogeographical region, methodology, and study question. Second, we use this comprehensive database to analyse the abiotic and biotic factors shaping ant CTLs. Our results highlight how CTLs may affect future distribution patterns and ecological performance in ants. Additionally, we identify the greatest remaining gaps in knowledge and create a research roadmap to promote rapid advances in this field of study.

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