2020
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.13584
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Strangers in a strange land: Globally unusual thermal tolerance in Collembola from the Cape Floristic Region

Abstract: Specific trait–environment interactions have led to globally unusual botanical radiations in the Cape Floristic Region (CFR) of South Africa. Yet it is unclear whether such interactions have similarly resulted in the diversification of the fauna independently of associations with plants. We explore this question for the Collembola genus Seira, which includes 89 species in the CFR, and appears to have diversified substantially into warm, dry fynbos shrublands—habitats atypical of those usually occupied by Coll… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…As all sites comprised shrubland or semi-desert environments with sparse vegetation, which have thermal landscapes that are relatively homogenous when compared to more complex forest environments, and the ant species studied were all epigaeic, this soil temperature measurement was determined to be characteristic of the site as a whole. We do, however, acknowledge that although this approach affords complete temporal coverage, which captures the largest variance in thermal environment for the study sites (Liu et al, 2020…”
Section: Environmental Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As all sites comprised shrubland or semi-desert environments with sparse vegetation, which have thermal landscapes that are relatively homogenous when compared to more complex forest environments, and the ant species studied were all epigaeic, this soil temperature measurement was determined to be characteristic of the site as a whole. We do, however, acknowledge that although this approach affords complete temporal coverage, which captures the largest variance in thermal environment for the study sites (Liu et al, 2020…”
Section: Environmental Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And this distinction is not exclusive for large vertebrates that dominate open habitats (Bond, 2019). For instance, the most important factor determining the assembly of ant species in Australia is whether they live in an open or closed biome (Andersen, 2019); and South African forests and shrublands also differ in the assembly of Collembola, with contrasted functional traits in each biome (Liu et al., 2020). Open/closed environments have also generated species divergences in animals, including elephants (Rohland et al., 2010), birds (Slabbekoorn & Smith, 2002) and even hominids (Roberts et al., 2016).…”
Section: Taxonomic and Functional Differences In The Biotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…heathardening) and long-term developmental and adult acclimation responses to the phenotypic plasticity of thermal limits has proven a complex task in ectotherms. Because thermal tolerance correlates strongly with geographic distribution and population abundance or viability in insects (Sørensen et al, 2005a,b;Mitchell et al, 2011;Kellermann et al, 2012;Vorhees et al, 2013;Overgaard et al, 2014;Andersen et al, 2015;Bush et al, 2016;Liu et al, 2020), modeling the contribution of different forms of acclimation to thermal plasticity might prove pivotal in our ability to predict species' responses to climate change (Allen et al, 2016;Sinclair et al, 2016;González-Tokman et al, 2020;Braschler et al, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%