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Biology

Western University

Antarctic Regions

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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Thermal Preference And Performance In A Sub-Antarctic Caterpillar: A Test Of The Coadaptation Hypothesis And Its Alternatives., Tanya M Haupt, Brent J Sinclair, Steven L Chown Apr 2017

Thermal Preference And Performance In A Sub-Antarctic Caterpillar: A Test Of The Coadaptation Hypothesis And Its Alternatives., Tanya M Haupt, Brent J Sinclair, Steven L Chown

Biology Publications

Physiological ecologists have long assumed that thermoregulatory behaviour will evolve to optimise physiological performance. The coadaptation hypothesis predicts that an animal's preferred body temperature will correspond to the temperature at which its performance is optimal. Here we use a strong inference approach to examine the relationship between thermal preference and locomotor performance in the caterpillars of a wingless sub-Antarctic moth, Pringleophaga marioni Viette (Tineidae). The coadaptation hypothesis and its alternatives (suboptimal is optimal, thermodynamic effect, trait variation) are tested. Compared to the optimal movement temperature (22.5°C for field-fresh caterpillars and 25, 20, 22.5, 25 and 20°C following seven day acclimations …


Similar Metabolic Rate-Temperature Relationships After Acclimation At Constant And Fluctuating Temperatures In Caterpillars Of A Sub-Antarctic Moth., Steven L Chown, Tanya M Haupt, Brent J Sinclair Feb 2016

Similar Metabolic Rate-Temperature Relationships After Acclimation At Constant And Fluctuating Temperatures In Caterpillars Of A Sub-Antarctic Moth., Steven L Chown, Tanya M Haupt, Brent J Sinclair

Biology Publications

Temperature compensation in whole-animal metabolic rate is one of the responses thought, controversially, to characterize insects from low temperature environments. Temperature compensation may either involve a change in absolute values of metabolic rates or a change in the slope of the metabolic rate - temperature relationship. Moreover, assessments of compensation may be complicated by animal responses to fluctuating temperatures. Here we examined whole animal metabolic rates, at 0 °C, 5 °C, 10 °C and 15 °C, in caterpillars of the sub-Antarctic moth, Pringleophaga marioni Viette (Tineidae), following one week acclimations to 5 °C, 10 °C and 15 °C, and fluctuating …