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On the Brink of Change? Environmental Drivers of Voluntary Thermal Maximum in South American Pitvipers.

Authors :
Diaz‐Ricaurte, Juan C.
Serrano, Filipe C.
Camacho, Agustín
Nogueira, Cristiano de C.
Travaglia‐Cardoso, Silvia Regina
Martins, Marcio
Source :
Journal of Biogeography. Oct2024, p1. 14p. 3 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

ABSTRACT Aim Location Taxon Methods Results Main Conclusions We test the relationship between the voluntary thermal maximum (VTMax; the temperature at which an individual actively retreats to a colder site) and geographical/environmental features in the distribution of South American pitvipers. Additionally, we explore the evolution of environmental temperatures and VTMax in species' ranges.South America.South American pitvipers of the genera Bothrops and Bothrocophias.We experimentally measured the VTMax of 15 species of South American pitvipers. We explored the relationship between VTMax and geographical/environmental features (e.g., latitude, topographic complexity and temperature) with PGLS regressions. Additionally, we explored the evolution of maximum (TMax) and minimum (TMin) environmental temperatures, as well as the Thermal Niche Breadth (TNB) and VTMax, using ancestral state reconstruction and testing for phylogenetic signal.Mean VTMax values for South American pitvipers clustered primarily within the 34°C–36°C range, exhibiting little variation among species or clades. No significant correlations were found between VTMax and climatic or geographic variables. Furthermore, our analysis revealed that these snakes are absent from regions where maximum temperatures surpass their preferred thermal tolerances. Ancestral state reconstruction indicated divergent evolutionary pathways for thermal limits among species, independent of phylogenetic relationships.South American pitvipers unexpectedly exhibit similar voluntary thermal maximum values across a wide range of habitats and despite distinct phylogenetic relationships. Our results indicate that there is no strong climatic niche conservatism for South American pitvipers, with a likely weak selective pressure of VTMax. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03050270
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biogeography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180186840
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.15020