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      Acclimation capacity to global warming of amphibians and freshwater fishes: Drivers, patterns, and data limitations

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          Abstract

          Amphibians and fishes play a central role in shaping the structure and function of freshwater environments. These organisms have a limited capacity to disperse across different habitats and the thermal buffer offered by freshwater systems is small. Understanding determinants and patterns of their physiological sensitivity across life history is, therefore, imperative to predicting the impacts of climate change in freshwater systems. Based on a systematic literature review including 345 experiments with 998 estimates on 96 amphibian (Anura/Caudata) and 93 freshwater fish species (Teleostei), we conducted a quantitative synthesis to explore phylogenetic, ontogenetic, and biogeographic (thermal adaptation) patterns in upper thermal tolerance (CT max) and thermal acclimation capacity (acclimation response ratio, ARR) as well as the influence of the methodology used to assess these thermal traits using a conditional inference tree analysis. We found globally consistent patterns in CT max and ARR, with phylogeny (taxa/order), experimental methodology, climatic origin, and life stage as significant determinants of thermal traits. The analysis demonstrated that CT max does not primarily depend on the climatic origin but on experimental acclimation temperature and duration, and life stage. Higher acclimation temperatures and longer acclimation times led to higher CT max values, whereby Anuran larvae revealed a higher CT max than older life stages. The ARR of freshwater fishes was more than twice that of amphibians. Differences in ARR between life stages were not significant. In addition to phylogenetic differences, we found that ARR also depended on acclimation duration, ramping rate, and adaptation to local temperature variability. However, the amount of data on early life stages is too small, methodologically inconsistent, and phylogenetically unbalanced to identify potential life cycle bottlenecks in thermal traits. We, therefore, propose methods to improve the robustness and comparability of CT max/ARR data across species and life stages, which is crucial for the conservation of freshwater biodiversity under climate change.

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          WorldClim 2: new 1-km spatial resolution climate surfaces for global land areas

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            A new look at the statistical model identification

            IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 19(6), 716-723
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              ape 5.0: an environment for modern phylogenetics and evolutionary analyses in R

              After more than fifteen years of existence, the R package ape has continuously grown its contents, and has been used by a growing community of users. The release of version 5.0 has marked a leap towards a modern software for evolutionary analyses. Efforts have been put to improve efficiency, flexibility, support for 'big data' (R's long vectors), ease of use and quality check before a new release. These changes will hopefully make ape a useful software for the study of biodiversity and evolution in a context of increasing data quantity.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Global Change Biology
                Global Change Biology
                Wiley
                1354-1013
                1365-2486
                May 2024
                May 21 2024
                May 2024
                : 30
                : 5
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Zoological Institute Technische Universität Braunschweig Braunschweig Germany
                [2 ] Institute of Animal Cell and Systems Biology Universität Hamburg Hamburg Germany
                [3 ] Ecology of Living Marine Resources Universität Hamburg Hamburg Germany
                [4 ] Department of Coastal Systems Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research Den Burg The Netherlands
                [5 ] Alfred Wegner Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research Bremerhaven Germany
                [6 ] Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity at the University of Oldenburg (HIFMB) Oldenburg Germany
                [7 ] New York University Abu Dhabi Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates
                [8 ] Center for Research on Biodiversity Dynamics and Climate Change State University of São Paulo‐UNESP Rio Claro Brazil
                [9 ] Fish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory Department of Biology and Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Science, Carleton University Ottawa Ontario Canada
                [10 ] Marine Animal Ecology Group, Department of Animal Sciences Wageningen University Wageningen The Netherlands
                Article
                10.1111/gcb.17318
                9682649f-2fba-4866-98c2-00f0f7a46612
                © 2024

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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