Thermal acclimation capacity was investigated in adults of three tropical marine invertebrates, the subtidal barnacle Striatobalanus amaryllis, the intertidal gastropod Volegalea cochlidium and the intertidal barnacle Amphibalanus amphitrite. To test the relative importance of transgenerational acclimation, the developmental acclimation capacity of A. amphitrite was investigated in F1 and F2 generations reared at a subset of the same incubation temperatures. The increase in CTmax (measured through loss of key behavioural metrics) of F0 adults across the incubation temperature range 25.4–33.4 °C was low: 0.00 °C (V. cochlidium), 0.05 °C (S. amaryllis) and 0.06 °C (A. amphitrite) per 1 °C increase in incubation temperature (the acclimation re...
Predicting how species will respond to increased environmental temperatures is key to understanding ...
Marine ectotherms have evolved a range of physiological strategies to cope with temperature changes ...
Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are increasing in both intensity and frequency against a backdrop of gradual...
A primary goal of climate change research is to determine if species will be able to persist in a wa...
Rapid ocean warming may alter habitat suitability and population fitness for marine ectotherms. Susc...
Predicting species vulnerability to global warming requires a comprehensive, mechanistic understandi...
Animal physiology, ecology and evolution are affected by temperature and it is expected that communi...
The temperature tolerances of individuals in geographically separated populations of a single specie...
Aim To test if physiological acclimation can buffer species against increasing extreme heat due to c...
No embargo requiredFuture climate change is leading to the redistribution of life on Earth as specie...
With both global surface temperatures and the incidence and intensity of extreme temperature events ...
Ocean warming is predicted to challenge the persistence of a variety of marine organisms, especially...
Accelerating climate change will strongly influence marine species across the world, altering the co...
The upper thermal limits (CTmax) of several crustacean planktonic species were investigated with a d...
The differential response of marine populations to climate change remains poorly understood. Here, w...
Predicting how species will respond to increased environmental temperatures is key to understanding ...
Marine ectotherms have evolved a range of physiological strategies to cope with temperature changes ...
Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are increasing in both intensity and frequency against a backdrop of gradual...
A primary goal of climate change research is to determine if species will be able to persist in a wa...
Rapid ocean warming may alter habitat suitability and population fitness for marine ectotherms. Susc...
Predicting species vulnerability to global warming requires a comprehensive, mechanistic understandi...
Animal physiology, ecology and evolution are affected by temperature and it is expected that communi...
The temperature tolerances of individuals in geographically separated populations of a single specie...
Aim To test if physiological acclimation can buffer species against increasing extreme heat due to c...
No embargo requiredFuture climate change is leading to the redistribution of life on Earth as specie...
With both global surface temperatures and the incidence and intensity of extreme temperature events ...
Ocean warming is predicted to challenge the persistence of a variety of marine organisms, especially...
Accelerating climate change will strongly influence marine species across the world, altering the co...
The upper thermal limits (CTmax) of several crustacean planktonic species were investigated with a d...
The differential response of marine populations to climate change remains poorly understood. Here, w...
Predicting how species will respond to increased environmental temperatures is key to understanding ...
Marine ectotherms have evolved a range of physiological strategies to cope with temperature changes ...
Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are increasing in both intensity and frequency against a backdrop of gradual...