The response of body size to increasing temperature constitutes a universal response to climate change that could strongly affect terrestrial ectotherms, but the magnitude and direction of such responses remain unknown in most species. The metabolic cost of increased temperature could reduce body size but long growing seasons could also increase body size as was recently shown in an Arctic spider species. Here, we present the longest known time series on body size variation in two High-Arctic butterfly species: Boloria chariclea and Colias hecla. We measured wing length of nearly 4500 individuals collected annually between 1996 and 2013 from Zackenberg, Greenland and found that wing length significantly decreased at a similar rate in both s...
Whether shrinking body size is a universal response to climate change remains controversial. Moreove...
1. Body size affects rates of most biological and ecological processes, from individual performance ...
Geographic range shifts in species’ distributions, due to climate change, imply altered dynamics at ...
The response of body size to increasing temperature constitutes a universal response to climate chan...
Current global warming is particularly pronounced in the Arctic and arthropods are expected to respo...
Body size has been shown to decrease with increasing temperature in many species, prompting the sugg...
Chironomids are a useful group for investigating body size responses to warming due to their high lo...
Body size has been shown to decrease with increasing temperature in many species, prompting the sugg...
Whether shrinking body size is a universal response to climate change remains controversial. Moreove...
1. Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each stage. ...
Numerous species shift or expand their ranges polewards in response to climate change. Even when exp...
1. Climate change is expected to produce shifts in species distributions as well as behavioural, lif...
1. Body size is highly correlated with physiological traits, fitness, and trophic interactions. Thes...
Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each stage. Thu...
Summary1. Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each ...
Whether shrinking body size is a universal response to climate change remains controversial. Moreove...
1. Body size affects rates of most biological and ecological processes, from individual performance ...
Geographic range shifts in species’ distributions, due to climate change, imply altered dynamics at ...
The response of body size to increasing temperature constitutes a universal response to climate chan...
Current global warming is particularly pronounced in the Arctic and arthropods are expected to respo...
Body size has been shown to decrease with increasing temperature in many species, prompting the sugg...
Chironomids are a useful group for investigating body size responses to warming due to their high lo...
Body size has been shown to decrease with increasing temperature in many species, prompting the sugg...
Whether shrinking body size is a universal response to climate change remains controversial. Moreove...
1. Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each stage. ...
Numerous species shift or expand their ranges polewards in response to climate change. Even when exp...
1. Climate change is expected to produce shifts in species distributions as well as behavioural, lif...
1. Body size is highly correlated with physiological traits, fitness, and trophic interactions. Thes...
Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each stage. Thu...
Summary1. Animals with distinct life stages are often exposed to different temperatures during each ...
Whether shrinking body size is a universal response to climate change remains controversial. Moreove...
1. Body size affects rates of most biological and ecological processes, from individual performance ...
Geographic range shifts in species’ distributions, due to climate change, imply altered dynamics at ...