Journal article

Ecologically relevant measures of tolerance to potentially lethal temperatures

JS Terblanche, AA Hoffmann, KA Mitchell, L Rako, PC Le Roux, SL Chown

Journal of Experimental Biology | Published : 2011

Abstract

The acute thermal tolerance of ectotherms has been measured in a variety of ways; these include assays where organisms are shifted abruptly to stressful temperatures and assays where organisms experience temperatures that are ramped more slowly to stressful levels. Ramping assays are thought to be more relevant to natural conditions where sudden abrupt shifts are unlikely to occur often, but it has been argued that thermal limits established under ramping conditions are underestimates of true thermal limits because stresses due to starvation and/or desiccation can arise under ramping. These confounding effects might also impact the variance and heritability of thermal tolerance. We argue her..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

S.L.C. and J.S.T. are supported by separate grants from the National Research Foundation Incentive Funding for Rated researchers program. K.A.M.'s visit to Stellenbosch was supported by S.L.C.'s National Research Foundation IFR grant. A.A.H., K.A.M. and L.R. were supported through the Australian Research Council.