Climatic gradients impose clinal selection on animal ecological and physiological performance, often promoting geographic body size clines. Bergmann's rule predicts that body size increases with decreasing environmental temperatures given the need to retain body-heat through adjustments of body-mass-to-surface-area ratio. This prediction generally holds for endotherms, but remains controversial for ectotherms. An alternative interpretation, the 'resource rule', suggests that food abundance, primary productivity and precipitation (which, unlike temperature, do not necessarily correlate with geography), drive body size clines. We investigate geographic variation in body size within 65 species of lizards and snakes (squamates) based on...
abstract: The generality and causes of Bergmann's rule have been debated vigorously in the last...
Reproductive mode, ancestry, and climate are hypothesized to determine body-size variation in reptil...
The validity of Bergmann's rule, perhaps the best known ecogeographical rule, has been questioned fo...
Abstract Climatic gradients impose clinal selection on animal ecological and physiological performan...
Aim: Variation in body size across animal species underlies most ecological and evo‐lutionary proces...
Background. The impact of environmental gradients on the evolution of life history traits is a centr...
Bergmann's rule predicts larger body sizes in species living in higher latitudes and altitudes. This...
Aim To document geographical interspecific patterns of body size of European and North American squa...
Bergmann's rule—the tendency for body size to increase in colder environments—remains controversial ...
Bergmann's Rule predicts larger body sizes in colder habitats, increasing organisms’ ability to cons...
<div><p>Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size....
Recent climate change has re-invigorated scientific interest in the dynamics of geographic distribut...
Recent climate change has re-invigorated scientific interest in the dynamics of geographic distribut...
Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size. However...
Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size. However...
abstract: The generality and causes of Bergmann's rule have been debated vigorously in the last...
Reproductive mode, ancestry, and climate are hypothesized to determine body-size variation in reptil...
The validity of Bergmann's rule, perhaps the best known ecogeographical rule, has been questioned fo...
Abstract Climatic gradients impose clinal selection on animal ecological and physiological performan...
Aim: Variation in body size across animal species underlies most ecological and evo‐lutionary proces...
Background. The impact of environmental gradients on the evolution of life history traits is a centr...
Bergmann's rule predicts larger body sizes in species living in higher latitudes and altitudes. This...
Aim To document geographical interspecific patterns of body size of European and North American squa...
Bergmann's rule—the tendency for body size to increase in colder environments—remains controversial ...
Bergmann's Rule predicts larger body sizes in colder habitats, increasing organisms’ ability to cons...
<div><p>Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size....
Recent climate change has re-invigorated scientific interest in the dynamics of geographic distribut...
Recent climate change has re-invigorated scientific interest in the dynamics of geographic distribut...
Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size. However...
Ecogeographical rules help explain spatial and temporal patterns in intraspecific body size. However...
abstract: The generality and causes of Bergmann's rule have been debated vigorously in the last...
Reproductive mode, ancestry, and climate are hypothesized to determine body-size variation in reptil...
The validity of Bergmann's rule, perhaps the best known ecogeographical rule, has been questioned fo...