Abstract

Temperature varies on a daily and seasonal scale and thermal fluctuations are predicted to become even more pronounced under future climate changes. Studies suggest that plastic responses are crucial for species’ ability to cope with thermal stress including variability in temperature, but most often laboratory studies on thermal adaptation in plant and ectotherm organisms are performed at constant temperatures and few species included. Recent studies using fluctuating thermal regimes find that thermal performance is affected by both temperature mean and fluctuations, and that plastic responses likely will differ between species according to life strategy and selective past. Here we investigate how acclimation to fluctuating or constant temperature regimes, but with the same mean temperature, impact on heat stress tolerance across a plant (Arabidopsis thaliana) and two arthropod species (Orchesella cincta and Drosophila melanogaster) inhabiting widely different thermal microhabitats and with varying capability for behavioral stress avoidance. Moreover, we investigate the underlying metabolic responses of acclimation using NMR metabolomics. We find increased heat tolerance for D. melanogaster and A. thaliana exposed to fluctuating acclimation temperatures, but not for O. cincta. The response was most pronounced for A. thaliana, which also showed a stronger metabolome response to thermal fluctuations than both arthropods. Generally, sugars were more abundant across A. thaliana and D. melanogaster when exposed to fluctuating compared to constant temperature, whereas amino acids were less abundant. This pattern was not evident for O. cincta, and generally we do not find much evidence for similar metabolomics responses to fluctuating temperature acclimation across species. Differences between the investigated species’ ecology and different ability to behaviorally thermoregulate may have shaped their physiological responses to thermal fluctuations.

Highlights

  • The natural environment is constantly changing and abiotic factors fluctuate continuously on various spatial and temporal scales

  • Acclimation to the fluctuating compared to the constant thermal regime with equal mean temperature increased LT50 for A. thaliana and D. melanogaster in both experimental runs (Table 1, Fig 2)

  • Results of the present study reveal that A. thaliana and D. melanogaster show increased heat tolerance in response to acclimation to fluctuating temperatures in accordance with Jensen’s inequality

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Summary

Introduction

The natural environment is constantly changing and abiotic factors fluctuate continuously on various spatial and temporal scales. These changes can pose stress on organisms [1, 2] and especially extreme temperatures are important physical factors that affect the abundance and distribution of species [3,4,5,6]. To survive and reproduce in fluctuating and periodically stressful environments individuals and populations need to adjust their physiology, morphology or behavior to mitigate adverse effects on fitness. This can occur via phenotypic changes within the lifetime of an individual, cross-generational epigenetic responses, or evolutionary adaptations across generations [4, 7]. The empirical support for the theory has been inconsistent and likely depends on the past selective pressures on species and traits and the nature of thermal regimes applied [12, 26]

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