Abstract

Abstract Thermal acclimation is often considered critical in organismal responses to novel thermal conditions. Our understanding of the physiological implications of acclimation is largely derived from lab studies that either manipulate daytime basking availability or use of constant thermal regimes. In contrast, the importance of the nocturnal thermal environment (e.g. the extent of thermal respite) is often overlooked yet could play a vital role in thermal acclimation in the wild. To fill this gap, we acclimated lizards (Amphibolurus muricatus) under three thermal regimes (Hot Constant, Cold Constant and Alternating) and compared their physiological responses (Metabolic Rate, Sprint Speed, Thermal Preferences and Thermal Limits). We found that animals maintained constantly at hot temperatures (preferred temperature, 35°C) gained sprint performance increases and exhibited shifts in thermal optima not seen in those maintained constantly at cold temperatures (20°C), yet suffered costs to growth (in smaller animals) and maintenance (mass loss in larger animals). Animals maintained at alternating temperatures (12 h 20°C; 12 h 35°C) had performance benefits similar to animals in the hot treatment, without experiencing reductions in juvenile growth and adult mass. Animals acclimated under hot temperatures showed a significant lower preferred and voluntary maximum temperatures compared to animals acclimated under a cold temperature regime. We found no impact of acclimation treatment on behavioural thermal limits or standard metabolic rate. Overall, we show that alternating between access to preferred temperatures and having periods of energetic rest confer the greatest benefits for our animals. These results highlight the importance of natural body temperature variation for enhancing overall ectotherm performance and physiology, and the costs of novel thermal environments that fail to provide this variation. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

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