Temperature-induced shifts in hibernation behavior in experimental amphibian populations

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作者
Xu Gao
Changnan Jin
Diego Llusia
Yiming Li
机构
[1] Key Laboratory of Animal Ecology and Conservation Biology,
[2] Institute of Zoology,undefined
[3] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
[4] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
[5] Chinese National Geography Magazine,undefined
[6] Institut de Systématique,undefined
[7] Évolution,undefined
[8] Biodiversité,undefined
[9] ISYEB UMR 7205 CNRS-MNHN-UPMC-EPHE,undefined
[10] Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle,undefined
[11] Sorbonne Universités,undefined
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Phenological shifts are primary responses of species to recent climate change. Such changes might lead to temporal mismatches in food webs and exacerbate species vulnerability. Yet insights into this phenomenon through experimental approaches are still scarce, especially in amphibians, which are particularly sensitive to changing thermal environments. Here, under controlled warming conditions, we report a critical, but poorly studied, life-cycle stage (i.e., hibernation) in frogs inhabiting subtropical latitudes. Using outdoor mesocosm experiments, we examined the effects of temperature (ambient vs. + ~2.2/2.4 °C of pre-/post-hibernation warming) and food availability (normal vs. 1/3 food) on the date of entrance into/emergence from hibernation in Pelophylax nigromaculatus. We found temperature was the major factor determining the hibernation period, which showed a significant shortening under experimental warming (6–8 days), with delays in autumn and advances in spring. Moreover, the timing of hibernation was not affected by food availability, whereas sex and, particularly, age were key factors in the species’ phenological responses. Specifically, male individuals emerged from hibernation earlier, while older individuals also entered and emerged from hibernation earlier. We believe that this study provides some of the first experimental evidence for the effect of climate warming on the timing of amphibian hibernation.
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