Critical thermal maxima of Phyllaplysia taylori across populations from the US west coast

Local variation in microclimate, with extreme events amplified by ongoing climate change, can drive divergent physiological responses to warming across populations. As habitat temperature characteristics shift with climate change, populations may be required to use plasticity to deal with rapid shifts in thermal extremes. We investigated heat tolerance and metabolic rate in the direct-developing sea hare, Phyllaplysia taylori, to determine whether short-term plasticity (acclimation to winter, summer and future summer temperatures) was influenced by differences in microclimate. We identified correlations between thermal tolerance and genotype in P. taylori collected from sites along the western US coast from Ocean Shores, WA to Morro Bay, CA. P. taylori from all locations consistently exhibited critical thermal maxima (CTmax) above habitat temperatures, even when average daily variation in habitat temperature was considered (CTmax ranged from 24-35ºC, average=30.1±0.2ºC; average habitat temperature ranged from 12-20ºC, average=21±0.8ºC). CTmax and compensatory metabolic suppression after heat stress were correlated to habitat temperature. The breadth of plastic responses we observed (11°C) was substantially wider than reported for other poikilothermic taxa in the literature and did not appear to be population-specific. Our findings suggest that high plasticity of thermal tolerance precedes local adaptation, and improves the physiological resilience of populations under climate change.

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Tanner, Richelle L, Bowie, Rauri C K, Wang-Claypool, Cynthia, Stillman, Jonathon H (2024). Dataset: Critical thermal maxima of Phyllaplysia taylori across populations from the US west coast. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.925174

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Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.925174
Author Tanner, Richelle L
Given Name Richelle L
Family Name Tanner
More Authors
Bowie, Rauri C K
Wang-Claypool, Cynthia
Stillman, Jonathon H
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Tanner-etal_2020_CTmax
Subject Areas
Name: BiologicalClassification

Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: High thermal tolerance, but not its plasticity are driven by habitat temperature and genotype in an intertidal sea hare
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Source: Functional Ecology
Authors: Tanner Richelle L , Bowie Rauri C K , Wang-Claypool Cynthia , Stillman Jonathon H .