4.6 Article

Landscape effects on the thermotolerance of carabid beetles and the role of behavioral thermoregulation

Journal

INSECT SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 251-263

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1744-7917.13044

Keywords

agroecosystems; local adaptation; physiological thermal tolerance; plasticity; winter resistance

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This study compared the physiological thermotolerance and behavioral thermoregulation of carabid beetles in different landscape contexts. The results showed that landscape composition influenced the cold tolerance of carabid beetles, but the effect was reduced in larger beetles due to their greater mobility. Burrowing behavior was found to be the main behavioral response to cold stress, significantly raising carabid body temperature.
Physiological thermotolerance and behavioral thermoregulation are central to seasonal cold adaptation in ectothermic organisms. For species with enhanced mobility, behavioral responses may be of greater importance in the cold stress response. Employing the carabid beetles as a study organism, the current study compared physiological thermotolerance and behavioral thermoregulation in carabid species inhabiting cereal fields in different landscape contexts, from fine grain heterogeneous complex landscapes to homogenous simple landscapes. Physiological thermotolerance was determined via measurement of the CTmin and chill coma temperature. Behavioral responses to cold temperature exposure were determined employing a purpose built arena, and thoracic temperature measured to estimate the efficacy of the behavior as a form of behavioral thermoregulation. Results revealed an influence of landscape composition on the cold tolerance of carabid beetles, although species differed in their sensitivity to landscape intensification. A reduced effect of landscape on the thermotolerance of larger carabid beetles was observed, thought to be the consequence of greater mobility preventing local acclimation to microclimatic variation along the landscape intensification gradient. Investigation into behavioral thermoregulation of the 3 largest species revealed burrowing behavior to be the main behavioral response to cold stress, acting to significantly raise carabid body temperature. This finding highlights the importance of behavioral thermoregulation as a strategy to evade cold stress. The use of behavioral thermoregulation may negate the need to invest in physiological thermotolerance, further offering explanation for the lack of landscape effect on the physiological thermotolerance of larger carabids.

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