“…With predictions of hotter air temperatures and an increased frequency of extreme-heat events associated with global climate change ( IPCC, 2013 ), the survival and persistence of some intertidal species is likely to be challenged further. To predict the future fate of species and populations, ecologists have collected baseline rock temperature data ( Helmuth, 1999 ; Denny et al, 2011 ; Judge, Botton & Hamilton, 2011 ; Gunderson et al, 2019 ), created heat budget models ( Helmuth, 1999 ; Choi et al, 2019 ), investigated how x species is affected by y substrate temperature ( Raimondi, 1988 ; Lathlean, Ayre & Minchinton, 2012 ; Lathlean, Ayre & Minchinton, 2013 ; Lamb, Leslie & Shinen, 2014 ), or used biomimetic loggers to investigate how internal body temperatures can be variously affected by environmental temperature ( Helmuth & Hofmann, 2001 ; Seabra et al, 2011 ; Lathlean et al, 2015 ; Seuront et al, 2019 ). All of these studies confirm that temperature is an important driving force that can influence the distribution of species on rocky seashores.…”