Authors
Martha M Muñoz, Gary M Langham, Matthew C Brandley, Dan F Rosauer, Stephen E Williams, Craig Moritz
Publication date
2016/11/1
Journal
Evolution
Volume
70
Issue
11
Pages
2537-2549
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
There is pressing urgency to understand how tropical ectotherms can behaviorally and physiologically respond to climate warming. We examine how basking behavior and thermal environment interact to influence evolutionary variation in thermal physiology of multiple species of lygosomine rainforest skinks from the Wet Tropics of northeastern Queensland, Australia (AWT). These tropical lizards are behaviorally specialized to exploit canopy or sun, and are distributed across marked thermal clines in the AWT. Using phylogenetic analyses, we demonstrate that physiological parameters are either associated with changes in local thermal habitat or to basking behavior, but not both. Cold tolerance, the optimal sprint speed, and performance breadth are primarily influenced by local thermal environment. Specifically, montane lizards are more cool tolerant, have broader performance breadths, and higher optimum …
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