Includes bibliographical references (pages 42-51)The ability to survive freezing temperatures is of paramount importance to organisms living at high elevations. Many ectothermic vertebrates have traits that allow them to cope with extreme cold, such as the ability to supercool and/or tolerate freezing of extracellular fluids. I studied several aspects of cold-hardiness of six lizard species in the genus Liolaemus (Iguania: Liolaemidae) living along a 2525-m elevation gradient (1550???4075 m) in northwestern Argentina. Specifically, I tested for supercooling, freeze tolerance, and the temperature of ice inoculation. I hypothesized that high-elevation (>3000 m) species would have greater capacities to supercool and tolerate freezing, while be...
The critical thermal limits of organisms and the thermal sensitivity of their performance tend to va...
Aim Identifying factors that limit species distributions is a fundamental question in ecology with ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
In environments where the temperature periodically drops below zero, it is remarkable that some liza...
In environments where the temperature periodically drops lower than zero, some lizards remarkably en...
One of the fundamental goals in macroecology is to understand the relationship among species’ geogra...
The vulnerability of populations and species to global warming depends not only on the environmental...
Climate change and rising global temperatures pose a serious threat to biodiversity. We assessed the...
We studied the efficiency of thermoregulation in four high elevation Liolaemus species in the Andes ...
Lizard activity and endurance of cold climate is regulated by several factors such as evolutionary p...
The critical thermal limits of organisms and the thermal sensitivity of their performance tends to v...
Two competing hypotheses have been suggested to explain thermal sensitivity of lizards to environmen...
Understanding how organisms respond to climatic variability and novel conditions is becoming an incr...
The widespread observation that heat tolerance is less variable than cold tolerance ('cold-tolerance...
Understanding how quickly physiological traits evolve is a topic of great interest, particularly in ...
The critical thermal limits of organisms and the thermal sensitivity of their performance tend to va...
Aim Identifying factors that limit species distributions is a fundamental question in ecology with ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
In environments where the temperature periodically drops below zero, it is remarkable that some liza...
In environments where the temperature periodically drops lower than zero, some lizards remarkably en...
One of the fundamental goals in macroecology is to understand the relationship among species’ geogra...
The vulnerability of populations and species to global warming depends not only on the environmental...
Climate change and rising global temperatures pose a serious threat to biodiversity. We assessed the...
We studied the efficiency of thermoregulation in four high elevation Liolaemus species in the Andes ...
Lizard activity and endurance of cold climate is regulated by several factors such as evolutionary p...
The critical thermal limits of organisms and the thermal sensitivity of their performance tends to v...
Two competing hypotheses have been suggested to explain thermal sensitivity of lizards to environmen...
Understanding how organisms respond to climatic variability and novel conditions is becoming an incr...
The widespread observation that heat tolerance is less variable than cold tolerance ('cold-tolerance...
Understanding how quickly physiological traits evolve is a topic of great interest, particularly in ...
The critical thermal limits of organisms and the thermal sensitivity of their performance tend to va...
Aim Identifying factors that limit species distributions is a fundamental question in ecology with ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...