Phenotypic integration of physiological and lifehistory traits along a latitudinal gradient in intertidal ectotherms.
Tipo
Facultad
Carrera/Programa
- Doctorado en Ingeniería de Sistemas Complejos
Profesor Guía
Título al que opta
- Doctor en Ingeniería de Sistemas Complejos
Modalidad
- Tesis monográfica
Fecha de aprobación
- 2019
Autorización
- AP
Fecha de publicación
2021-08-11Keywords
- Thermal tolerance
- Ectoderm - Physiology
- Marine organisms - Acclimatization
Resumen
In intertidal marine crustaceans, phenotypic variation in physiological and lifehistory traits is pervasive along latitudinal clines. However, organisms have complex phenotypes, and their traits do not vary independently but rather interact differentially between them, effect that is caused by genetic and/or environmental forces. One of the abiotic factors that most influences organisms is the temperature that affects practically all the biochemical and physiological processes of organisms, which has been linked to growth, survival and reproduction patterns. In this sense, these ectothermal organisms have had to adapt to different environmental conditions, modifying or adjusting their physiology and / or behavior to tolerate the extreme environmental conditions of the intertidal. This allows us to ask some questions such as: 1) Are there compromises between physiological components and life-history traits in marine ectothermal organisms?. 2) What is the role in acclimatization to different geographical gradients in physiological responses (thermal tolerances) in ectothermic marine organisms? 3) Does the integration of physiological traits responses vary between populations of different species?. To answer these questions, we evaluate the phenotypic integration of life-history and physiological traits based on geographic
variations found at latitudinal and intertidal levels. This study covered a latitudinal gradient
of approximately 3,000 km from the coast around Iquique to the coast of Chiloé; we study
different populations of decapod crabs that are distributed in vertical bands in the rocky
intertidal zone exposing themselves to different thermal variations. Our main results reflect
(1) Variations in physiological traits with latitude appear to be a plastic response controlled
primarily by temperature, rather than a fixed traits of site-specific populations, therefore,
population differences in physiological rates result in a differential mean in SFG of
ovigerous and non-ovigerous females, which could be related to the frequency of
reproductive events in those species that are distributed across wide geographical
gradients. (2) The species that inhabit the intertidal-high maintain a greater integration
between their physiological traits and greater thermal tolerances and present less plasticity
than those that inhabit the zones of low intertidal. (3) The physiological behavior of the
studied species differs along a clinal gradient, and the differentiation of the P-Matrix
depends mainly on the microhabitat in which these species are distributed vertically in
addition to the environment barriers such as biogeographic breaks.
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