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High Capacity for Physiological Plasticity Occurs at a Slow Rate in Ectotherms

Tim Burton, Sigurd Einum

2025Ecology Letters16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Phenotypic plasticity enables organisms to express a phenotype that is optimal in their current environment. The ability of organisms to obtain the optimum phenotype is determined by their (i) capacity for plasticity, which facilitates phenotypic adjustment corresponding to the amplitude of environmental change but also their (ii) rate of plasticity, because this determines if the expressed phenotype lags behind changes in the optimum. How the rate of- and capacity for plasticity have co-evolved will thus be critical for the resilience of organisms under different patterns of environmental change. To evaluate the direction of the evolved relationship between plasticity rate and capacity, we reanalysed experiments documenting the time course of thermal tolerance acclimation to temperature change across species of ectothermic animals. We found that the rate and capacity with which thermal tolerance responds plastically to temperature change are negatively correlated, a pattern inconsistent with current theory regarding the evolution of phenotypic plasticity.

Topics & Concepts

EctothermPhenotypic plasticityPlasticityBiologyAcclimatizationPhenotypeEcologyEnvironmental changeEvolutionary biologyClimate changeGeneticsGeneThermodynamicsPhysicsPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsAnimal Behavior and ReproductionInsect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
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