Rain shadow effects predict population differences in thermal tolerance of leaf-cutting ant workers (Atta cephalotes)
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Tests of hypotheses for the evolution of thermal physiology often rely on mean temperatures, but mounting evidence suggests geographic variation in temperature extremes is also an important predictor of speciesâ thermal tolerances. Although the tropics are less thermally variable than higher latitude regions, rain shadows on the leeward sides of mountains can experience greater diel and seasonal variation in temperature than windward sites. Rain shadows provide opportunities to test predictions about the relationships of extreme temperatures with thermal physiology while controlling for latitude. We tested the hypothesis that populations of leaf-cutting ants (Atta cephalotes) in leeward, montane, and windward sites in Costa Rica would differ in upper thermal tolerances (CTmax) of workers. As predicted from rain shadow effects via extreme high temperatures, the leeward rain-shadow site yielded the highest mean CTmax (rain shadow site 42.1±0.3 °C, Montane site 38.2±0.5 °C, windward site 3...
创建时间:
2025-06-25



