Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"traits" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 No species left behind: borrowing strength to map data-deficient species Sharma S; Winner K; Pollock LJ; Thorson JT; Mäkinen J; Merow C; Pedersen EJ; Chefira KF; Portmann JM; Iannarilli F; Beery S; de Lutio R; Jetz W; 40571432
BIOLOGY
2 Variation in flower morphology associated with higher bee diversity in urban green spaces Sinno S; MacInnis G; Lessard JP; Ziter CD; 39609370
BIOLOGY
3 Cone allometry and seed protection from fire are similar in serotinous and nonserotinous conifers Greene DF; Kane JM; Pounden E; Michaletz ST; 38375897
BIOLOGY
4 Ecological strategies of (pl)ants: Towards a world-wide worker economic spectrum for ants Gibb H; Bishop TR; Leahy L; Parr CL; Lessard JP; Sanders NJ; Shik JZ; Ibarra-Isassi J; Narendra A; Dunn RR; Wright IJ; 37056633
BIOLOGY
5 Social cognition and depression in adolescent girls Porter-Vignola E; Booij L; Dansereau-Laberge ÈM; Garel P; Bossé Chartier G; Seni AG; Beauchamp MH; Herba CM; 35738696
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Concurrent Validity of the Adult Eating Behavior Questionnaire in a Canadian Sample Cohen TR; Kakinami L; Plourde H; Hunot-Alexander C; Beeken RJ; 34925181
PERFORM
7 Defensive Traits during White Spruce (Picea glauca) Leaf Ontogeny Antoine-Olivier Lirette 34357304
BIOLOGY
8 Temperature drives caste-specific morphological clines in ants. Brassard F, Francoeur A, Lessard JP 32858759
BIOLOGY
9 The interplay of nested biotic interactions and the abiotic environment regulates populations of a hypersymbiont. Mestre A, Poulin R, Holt RD, Barfield M, Clamp JC, Fernandez-Leborans G, Mesquita-Joanes F 31408529
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Temperature drives caste-specific morphological clines in ants.
Authors:Brassard FFrancoeur ALessard JP
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32858759
DOI:10.1111/1365-2656.13330
Publication:The Journal of animal ecology
Keywords:Bergmann's ruleFormicidaeclimateenvironmental gradientsfunctional traitsmorphospace
PMID:32858759 Category:J Anim Ecol Date Added:2020-08-29
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Department of Biology, University of Quebec at Chicoutimi, Chicoutimi, QC, Canada.

Description:

Temperature drives caste-specific morphological clines in ants.

J Anim Ecol. 2020 Aug 28; :

Authors: Brassard F, Francoeur A, Lessard JP

Abstract

1. The morphology of organisms relates to most aspects of their life history and autecology. As such, elucidating the drivers of morphological variation along environmental gradients might give insight into processes limiting species distributions. In eusocial organisms, the concept of morphology is more complex than in solitary organisms. Eusocial insects such as ants exhibit drastic morphological differences between reproductive and worker castes. How environmental selection operates on the morphology of each caste, and whether caste-specific selection has fitness consequences is largely unknown, but potentially crucial to understand what limits ant species' distributions. 2. Here, we aimed to examine whether ant shape and body size co-varies with climate at the scale of an entire continent, and whether such relationship might be caste-specific. 3. We used 26,472 georeferenced morphometric measurements from 2206 individual ants belonging to 32 closely related North American species in the genus Formica to assess how ant morphology relates to geographic variation in the abiotic environment. 4. Although precipitation and seasonality explained some of the geographic variation in morphology, temperature was the best predictor. Specifically, geographic variation in body size was positively related to temperature, meaning that ants are smaller in cold than in warm environments. Moreover, the strength of the relationship between size and temperature was stronger for the reproductive castes (i.e. queens and males) than for the worker caste. The shape of workers and males also varied along these large-scale abiotic gradients. Specifically, the relative length of workers' legs, thoraxes and antennae positively related to temperature, meaning that they had shorter appendages in cold environments. In contrast, males had smaller heads, but larger thoraxes in more seasonal environments. 5. Overall, our results suggest that geographic variation in ambient temperature influences the morphology of ants, but that the strength of this effect is caste-specific. In conclusion, whereas ant ecology has traditionally focused on workers, our study shows that considering the ecology of the reproductive castes is imperative to move forward in this field.

PMID: 32858759 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]





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