1936
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1936.tb06295.x
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The Activity and Metabolism of Poikilothermal Animals in Different Latitudes.—I.

Abstract: Summary. This is the first comparative study of the activity and metabolism of poikilothermal animals living in different latitudes. For seven pairs of species of marine invertebrates, inhabiting respectively English waters and more northern seas, the oxygen consumption of the warmerwater species is greater than that of the colder‐water species (measured at the normal temperatures at which each species lives) although the locomotory activity of the former is apparently no greater (Table I., text‐figs. 1 & 2). … Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…The rate of change with temperature was also different, and these other differences between the two forms, which were once regarded as varieties, are sufficient to justify separation as distinct species, a procedure already, suggested for morphological and ecological reasons (Utinomi, 1959). The lower rate of beat in C. depressus may perhaps be related to the rather precarious habitat it occupies, where a generally lower level of metabolic activity may be an advantage, or it may be a latitudinal effect (Fox, 1939), the metabolic rate being less at a given temperature in C. depressus than in the more northern form C. stellatus. The latter possibility would appear to be supported by the higher temperature at which optimum activity is reached in C. depressus and its reluctance to show rhythmic activity below 10°, but further comment must wait for more information on the distribution of the species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rate of change with temperature was also different, and these other differences between the two forms, which were once regarded as varieties, are sufficient to justify separation as distinct species, a procedure already, suggested for morphological and ecological reasons (Utinomi, 1959). The lower rate of beat in C. depressus may perhaps be related to the rather precarious habitat it occupies, where a generally lower level of metabolic activity may be an advantage, or it may be a latitudinal effect (Fox, 1939), the metabolic rate being less at a given temperature in C. depressus than in the more northern form C. stellatus. The latter possibility would appear to be supported by the higher temperature at which optimum activity is reached in C. depressus and its reluctance to show rhythmic activity below 10°, but further comment must wait for more information on the distribution of the species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A further part of the difference may well be an adaptation to colder or warmer temperatures than the animal experiences elsewhere in its distribution (cf. Fox, 1939), but until observations are made at other localities this cannot be determined.…”
Section: The Rate Of Activitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of the critical leaps in our understanding of how temperature regime shapes the thermal biology of ectotherms have been made by comparing the physiology and behaviours of animals along steep environmental gradients that represent extremes in thermal magnitude and variability over large (for example, latitudinal 8,9 and altitudinal gradients 10 ) and small spatial scales (for example, intertidal gradients 5,11 ). Hydrothermal vents create one of the most thermally variable habitats in which ectotherms live.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%