Diminishing returns limit energetic costs of climate change
Authored by Jr Michael J Angilletta, Travis W Rusch, Ofir Levy, Lauren B Buckley, Jason D Borchert
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1803/suppinfo
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Changes in the time available for organisms to maintain physiologically
preferred temperatures (thermal opportunity) is a primary mechanism by
which climate change impacts the fitness and population dynamics of
organisms. Yet, it is unclear whether losses or gains in thermal
opportunity result in proportional changes in rates of energy
procurement and use. We experimentally quantified lizard food
consumption and energy assimilation at different durations of thermal
opportunity. We incorporated these data in an individual-based model of
foraging and digestion in lizards to explore the implications of
nonlinear responses to shifts in thermal opportunity across a wide
geographic range. Our model predicts that shifts in thermal
opportunities resulting from climate change alter energy intake
primarily through digestion rather than feeding, because simulated
lizards were able to fill their gut faster than they can digest their
food. Moreover, since rates of energy assimilation decelerate with
increasing thermal opportunity, shifts in daily energetic assimilation
would depend on the previous opportunity for thermoregulation. In
particular, the same changes in thermal opportunity will have little
impact on lizards from warm locations, while having a large impact on
lizards from cold locations where thermoregulation is possible for only
a few hours each day. Energy expenditure followed spatial patterns in
thermal opportunity, with greater annual energy expenditure occurring at
warmer locations. Our model predicts that lizards will spend more energy
under climate change by maintaining higher body temperatures and
remaining active longer. However, the predicted changes in energy
assimilation following climate change greatly exceeded the predicted
increases in energy expenditure. Simple models, which assume constant
rates of energy gain during activity, will potentially mislead efforts
to understand and predict the biological impacts of climate change.
Tags
Climate
Foraging
time
Temperature
Growth-rate
Assimilation
Species ranges
Body-mass
Lizards
Life-histories
Patch use
Digestion
Sceloporus
Lizard sceloporus-occidentalis
Widespread lizard
Foraging
activity
Thermal niches