4.7 Article

Improved heat tolerance in air drives the recurrent evolution of air-breathing

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.2927

关键词

air-breathing evolution; heat tolerance; oxygen limitation; terrestrial colonization

资金

  1. FP7-PEOPLE, IEF project 'The weakest links' [221017]
  2. PACES program of the AWI
  3. MIUR
  4. FP7-PEOPLE, IRSES Project 'CREC' [247514]
  5. MaCuMBA EU Project [311975]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The transition to air-breathing by formerly aquatic species has occurred repeatedly and independently in fish, crabs and other animal phyla, but the proximate drivers of this key innovation remain a long-standing puzzle in evolutionary biology. Most studies attribute the onset of air-breathing to the repeated occurrence of aquatic hypoxia; however, this hypothesis leaves the current geographical distribution of the 300 genera of air-breathing crabs unexplained. Here, we show that their occurrence is mainly related to high environmental temperatures in the tropics. We also demonstrate in an amphibious crab that the reduced cost of oxygen supply in air extends aerobic performance to higher temperatures and thuswidens the animal's thermal niche. These findings suggest that highwater temperature as a driver consistently explains the numerous times air-breathing has evolved. The data also indicate a central role for oxygen-and capacity-limited thermal tolerance not only in shaping sensitivity to current climate change but also in underpinning the climate-dependent evolution of animals, in this case the evolution of air-breathing.

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