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      Temperature response of growth of larval dragonflies – an overview

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      International Journal of Odonatology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Species Distribution Models: Ecological Explanation and Prediction Across Space and Time

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            Systematic variation in the temperature dependence of physiological and ecological traits.

            To understand the effects of temperature on biological systems, we compile, organize, and analyze a database of 1,072 thermal responses for microbes, plants, and animals. The unprecedented diversity of traits (n = 112), species (n = 309), body sizes (15 orders of magnitude), and habitats (all major biomes) in our database allows us to quantify novel features of the temperature response of biological traits. In particular, analysis of the rising component of within-species (intraspecific) responses reveals that 87% are fit well by the Boltzmann-Arrhenius model. The mean activation energy for these rises is 0.66 ± 0.05 eV, similar to the reported across-species (interspecific) value of 0.65 eV. However, systematic variation in the distribution of rise activation energies is evident, including previously unrecognized right skewness around a median of 0.55 eV. This skewness exists across levels of organization, taxa, trophic groups, and habitats, and it is partially explained by prey having increased trait performance at lower temperatures relative to predators, suggesting a thermal version of the life-dinner principle-stronger selection on running for your life than running for your dinner. For unimodal responses, habitat (marine, freshwater, and terrestrial) largely explains the mean temperature at which trait values are optimal but not variation around the mean. The distribution of activation energies for trait falls has a mean of 1.15 ± 0.39 eV (significantly higher than rises) and is also right-skewed. Our results highlight generalities and deviations in the thermal response of biological traits and help to provide a basis to predict better how biological systems, from cells to communities, respond to temperature change.
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              The evolution of thermal physiology in ectotherms

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Odonatology
                International Journal of Odonatology
                Informa UK Limited
                1388-7890
                2159-6719
                April 27 2015
                January 02 2015
                April 27 2015
                January 02 2015
                : 18
                : 1
                : 15-30
                Article
                10.1080/13887890.2015.1009392
                41ee4853-2267-49d4-8960-9b917d08bfe6
                © 2015
                History

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