Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Jun 2016

Relationship between Behavioral Thermoregulation and Physiological Function in Larval Stream Salamanders

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Page Range: 239 – 244
DOI: 10.1670/15-028
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Abstract

Relationships between behavioral regulation, environmental temperatures, and physiological tolerance are critical to conservation policy; however, these relationships may not be consistent among sister taxa. A species geographic range is influenced by various factors including physiological tolerance to temperature change. In this study, we investigated the effects of temperature variation on thermal preference and standard metabolic rates (SMR) of two species of larval salamanders, Eurycea cirrigera (Southern Two-Lined Salamander) and Eurycea wilderae (Blue Ridge Two-Lined Salamander). These species share similar life histories, but E. cirrigera is broadly distributed and E. wilderae occupies a smaller range. We measured SMR using volume of oxygen consumption during closed-circuit respirometery trials conducted at 5°C increments between 5°C and 25°C. Standard metabolic rates were influenced by temperature, with a range of temperature-independent SMRs observed at those temperatures above each species laboratory-determined thermal preference. Concordant with their thermal preference (15.70°C) and more-narrow geographic range, E. wilderae exhibited a smaller scope of temperatures at which SMR was temperature-independent, relative to E. cirrigera, and metabolic rates were depressed at 25°C. Therefore, preferred thermal temperatures corresponded with physiological maxima and environmental temperatures in each species. Our results support the importance of behavioral thermoregulation in maintaining optimal physiological function. Further, these findings indicate that the physiological specialization that occurs in species of narrow geographic ranges may preclude favorable responses to changing environmental temperatures caused by land-cover changes, including loss of riparian forest in the Eastern United States.

Copyright: Copyright 2016 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles 2016
<sc>Fig</sc>
. 1. 
Fig . 1. 

Geographic range of Eurycea cirrigera (black) and Eurycea wilderae (gray). Range maps adapted from Lannoo (2005). The white X symbols indicate collection sites for study samples.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 2. 
Fig . 2. 

Thermal preferences of Eurycea cirrigera and Eurycea wilderae. Mean thermal preference for E. cirrigera (n = 25) and E. wilderae (n = 26) over 2 h. Range represents the 2.5% to 97.5% percentiles and box represents 1st and 3rd quartiles.


<sc>Fig</sc>
. 3. 
Fig . 3. 

Effect of temperature on standard metabolic rate in Eurycea cirrigera (A) and Eurycea wilderae (B). Values are presented as mean ± SE for eight subjects for each species. Vertical dotted lines represented mean thermal preference for each species (Fig. 2).


Contributor Notes

Corresponding Author. Present address: Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA; E-mail: justrickland@uky.edu

Present address: Department of Biology, The University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee, USA

Accepted: 21 Jul 2015
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