Litcius/Paper detail

Divergence in rates of phenotypic plasticity among ectotherms

Sigurd Einum, Tim Burton

2022Ecology Letters37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An individual's fitness cost associated with environmental change likely depends on the rate of adaptive phenotypic plasticity, and yet our understanding of plasticity rates in an ecological and evolutionary context remains limited. We provide the first quantitative synthesis of existing plasticity rate data, focusing on acclimation of temperature tolerance in ectothermic animals, where we demonstrate applicability of a recently proposed analytical approach. The analyses reveal considerable variation in plasticity rates of this trait among species, with half-times (how long it takes for the initial deviation from the acclimated phenotype to be reduced by 50% when individuals are shifted to a new environment) ranging from 3.7 to 770.2 h. Furthermore, rates differ among higher taxa, being higher for amphibians and reptiles than for crustaceans and fishes, and with insects being intermediate. We argue that a more comprehensive understanding of phenotypic plasticity will be attained through increased focus on the rate parameter.

Topics & Concepts

EctothermPhenotypic plasticityBiologyEcologyAcclimatizationPlasticityAdaptation (eye)TraitContext (archaeology)TaxonEvolutionary biologyZoologyPaleontologyComputer scienceNeuroscienceThermodynamicsPhysicsProgramming languagePhysiological and biochemical adaptationsAnimal Behavior and ReproductionSpecies Distribution and Climate Change