The shape of performance curves and their plasticity define how individuals and populations respond to environmental variability. In theory, maximum performance decreases with an increase in performance breadth. However, reversible acclimation may counteract this generalist-specialist trade-off, because performance optima track environmental conditions so that there is no benefit of generalist phenotypes. We tested this hypothesis by acclimating individual mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) to cool and warm temperatures consecutively and measuring performance curves of swimming performance after each acclimation treatment. Individuals from the same population differed significantly in performance maxima, performance breadth and the capacity ...
International audiencePlastic and evolutionary changes in traits related to biotic interactions are ...
Physiological ecologists have long sought to understand the plasticity of organisms in environments ...
Thermal acclimation is frequently cited as a means by which ectothermic animals improve their Darwin...
The shape of performance curves and their plasticity define how individuals and populations respond ...
Many ectothermic animals can respond to changes in their environment by altering the sensitivities o...
The physiology and behaviour of ectotherms are strongly influenced by environmental temperature. A g...
In response to seasonal variation in environmental temperature, many ectotherms are able to adjust t...
The co-evolution of acclimation capacity and thermal performance breadth has been a contentious issu...
1. Environmental variability and perturbations can influence population persistence. It is therefore...
Physiological rates are heavily dependent on temperature and body size. Most current predictions of ...
Within-individual plasticity (acclimation) counteracts potentially negative physiological effects re...
In this review we consider how small-scale temporal and spatial variation in body temperature, and b...
The beneficial acclimation hypothesis ( BAH) is controversial. While physiological work all but assu...
Few studies have examined the extent to which phenotypic plasticity in a given trait might be influ...
Background: Among the predictions of the effect of future climate change, the impact of thermal con...
International audiencePlastic and evolutionary changes in traits related to biotic interactions are ...
Physiological ecologists have long sought to understand the plasticity of organisms in environments ...
Thermal acclimation is frequently cited as a means by which ectothermic animals improve their Darwin...
The shape of performance curves and their plasticity define how individuals and populations respond ...
Many ectothermic animals can respond to changes in their environment by altering the sensitivities o...
The physiology and behaviour of ectotherms are strongly influenced by environmental temperature. A g...
In response to seasonal variation in environmental temperature, many ectotherms are able to adjust t...
The co-evolution of acclimation capacity and thermal performance breadth has been a contentious issu...
1. Environmental variability and perturbations can influence population persistence. It is therefore...
Physiological rates are heavily dependent on temperature and body size. Most current predictions of ...
Within-individual plasticity (acclimation) counteracts potentially negative physiological effects re...
In this review we consider how small-scale temporal and spatial variation in body temperature, and b...
The beneficial acclimation hypothesis ( BAH) is controversial. While physiological work all but assu...
Few studies have examined the extent to which phenotypic plasticity in a given trait might be influ...
Background: Among the predictions of the effect of future climate change, the impact of thermal con...
International audiencePlastic and evolutionary changes in traits related to biotic interactions are ...
Physiological ecologists have long sought to understand the plasticity of organisms in environments ...
Thermal acclimation is frequently cited as a means by which ectothermic animals improve their Darwin...