Abstract

Phenotypic plasticity is an important mechanism that allows populations to adjust to changing environments. Early life experiences can have lasting impacts on how individuals respond to environmental variation later in life (i.e., individual reaction norms), altering the capacity for populations to respond to selection. Here, we incubated lizard embryos (Lampropholis delicata) at two fluctuating developmental temperatures (cold = 23 ºC + / − 3 ºC, hot = 29 ºC + / − 3 ºC, ncold = 26, nhot = 25) to understand how it affected metabolic plasticity to temperature later in life. We repeatedly measured individual reaction norms across six temperatures 10 times over ~ 3.5 months (nobs = 3,818) to estimate the repeatability of average metabolic rate (intercept) and thermal plasticity (slope). The intercept and the slope of the population-level reaction norm was not affected by developmental temperature. Repeatability of average metabolic rate was, on average, 10% lower in hot incubated lizards but stable across all temperatures. The slope of the thermal reaction norm was overall moderately repeatable (R = 0.44, 95% CI = 0.035 – 0.93) suggesting that individual metabolic rate changed consistently with short-term changes in temperature, although credible intervals were quite broad. Importantly, reaction norm repeatability did not depend on early developmental temperature. Identifying factors affecting among-individual variation in thermal plasticity will be increasingly more important for terrestrial ectotherms living in changing climate. Our work implies that thermal metabolic plasticity is robust to early developmental temperatures and has the capacity to evolve, despite there being less consistent variation in metabolic rate under hot environments.

Highlights

  • A substantial amount of variation in an individual’s phenotype is determined by formative processes experienced throughout embryonic development

  • We found no evidence to suggest that metabolic rate or its response to short-term temperature changes was influenced by early developmental temperature

  • Our results suggest instead that thermal reaction norms for metabolic rate were robust to changes to the incubation temperatures we selected which were based on the thermal minimal and maximal of natural nests found in Sydney

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Summary

Introduction

A substantial amount of variation in an individual’s phenotype is determined by formative processes experienced throughout embryonic development. Environmental perturbations during this critical period can have persistent effects on an individual’s physiology, morphology, behaviour and life history (Noble et al 2021; Eyck et al 2019; O’Dea et al 2019). Reversible plasticity in phenotypic traits allows individuals to adjust to immediate changes in their surroundings (Piersma and Drent 2003), and can broadly be classified into two categories, acclimation and phenotypic flexibility (Piersma and Drent 2003; Havird et al 2020). Phenotypic flexibility, in contrast, describes changes in traits that are induced by short-term environmental exposure, such as changes in metabolic rate in response to ambient temperature (Piersma and Lindström 1997; Piersma and Drent 2003)

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