Journal article
Phenotypic plasticity in upper thermal limits is weakly related to Drosophila species distributions
KA Mitchell, CM Sgrò, AA Hoffmann
Functional Ecology | Published : 2011
Abstract
Acclimation and hardening represent examples of phenotypic plasticity, the extent to which phenotypes produced by the same genotype vary under different environments. Widespread species are expected to differ in thermal plasticity from narrowly distributed tropical species, but this has rarely been tested particularly when species are reared under the same conditions. We investigated acclimation and hardening responses of 11 widespread or tropically restricted Drosophila species from Australia using estimates of heat resistance where temperatures were increased suddenly (static measure) or slowly (ramping measure), and after controlling for phylogenetic relatedness. We predicted that restric..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Lauren B. Carrington, Belinda van Heerwaarden for comments on earlier drafts and Vanessa Kellermann and Sarah De Garis for assistance with species collection and maintenance. We would also like to thank Piero Calosi and two anonymous reviewers whose comments improved this manuscript. This research was supported by grants and fellowships from the Australian Research Council and Commonwealth Environmental Research Facility.