4.6 Article

Behavioural responses to warming differentially impact survival in introduced and native dung beetles

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 90, 期 1, 页码 273-281

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13366

关键词

behavioural ecology; behavioural plasticity; burrowing behaviour; climate warming; invasion success; maternal behaviour; Onthophagus; Scarabaeinae

资金

  1. Sigma Xi
  2. US National Science Foundation [IOS-1930829]
  3. University of Tennessee, Knoxville

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examined the differences in reproductive behaviors and behavioral plasticity between an introduced and a native dung beetle species under warming temperatures, and how these differences affected offspring survival. The introduced O. taurus produced more and larger brood balls, and buried them deeper than the native O. hecate in all treatments. However, both species showed similar levels of behavioral plasticity in response to warming temperatures. Differences in reproductive behaviors did affect survival, with warming temperatures having a greater impact on native O. hecate offspring compared to introduced O. taurus. Overall, behavior differences between native and introduced species may exacerbate the negative impacts of biological invasions under climate change.
Anthropogenic changes are often studied in isolation but may interact to affect biodiversity. For example, climate change could exacerbate the impacts of biological invasions if climate change differentially affects invasive and native species. Behavioural plasticity may mitigate some of the impacts of climate change, but species vary in their degree of behavioural plasticity. In particular, invasive species may have greater behavioural plasticity than native species since plasticity helps invasive species establish and spread in new environments. This plasticity could make invasives better able to cope with climate change. Here our goal was to examine whether reproductive behaviours and behavioural plasticity vary between an introduced and a native Onthophagus dung beetle species in response to warming temperatures and how differences in behaviour influence offspring survival. Using a repeated measures design, we exposed small colonies of introduced O. taurus and native O. hecate to three temperature treatments, including a control, low warming and high warming treatment, and then measured reproductive behaviours, including the number, size and burial depth of brood balls. We reared offspring in their brood balls in developmental temperatures that matched those of the brood ball burial depth to quantify survival. We found that the introduced O. taurus produced more brood balls and larger brood balls, and buried brood balls deeper than the native O. hecate in all treatments. However, the two species did not vary in the degree of behavioural plasticity in response to warming. Differences in reproductive behaviours did affect survival such that warming temperatures had a greater effect on survival of offspring of native O. hecate compared to introduced O. taurus. Overall, our results suggest that differences in behaviour between native and introduced species are one mechanism through which climate change may exacerbate negative impacts of biological invasions.

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