Abstract

ABSTRACTLow temperature is a primary determinant of growth and survival among organisms and almost all animals need to withstand temperature fluctuations in their surroundings. We used the hermaphroditic nematode Pristionchus pacificus to examine variation in cold tolerance in samples collected from 18 widespread locations. Samples were challenged by exposure to both direct and gradual low temperature after culture in the laboratory at 20°C. A short-term acclimation treatment was also applied to assess cold tolerance following a pre-exposure cold treatment. Finally, genotype-by-environment (G × E) analysis was performed on a subset of samples cultured at two additional temperatures (15°C and 25°C). P. pacificus displayed a high degree of natural variation in cold tolerance, corresponding to the presence of three distinct phenotypic classes among samples: cold tolerant, non-cold tolerant, cold tolerant plastic. Survival of gradual cold exposure was significantly higher than survival of direct exposure to low temperature and a cold exposure pre-treatment significantly enhanced cold tolerance in some samples. By focusing on a sub-set of well-sampled locations from tropical La Réunion Island, we found evidence of significant effects of genotype and environment on cold tolerance, and we also showed that, within the different Réunion locations sampled, all three phenotypic classes are generally well represented. Taken together, our results show that P. pacificus exhibits a highly plastic tolerance to cold exposure that may be partly driven by differential trait sensitivity in diverse environments.

Highlights

  • Throughout the diversity of life, all organisms are constrained by their physiological ability to respond to environmental variability at multiple temporal and spatial scales

  • Survival of exposure to low temperatures was characterized by a high degree of natural variation in P. pacificus (Fig. 2a)

  • Within populations, individuals are rarely identical; rather, there often exists a pronounced degree of variability, independent of age or body size, which natural selection can act upon to optimise the fitness of individuals (Morozov et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout the diversity of life, all organisms are constrained by their physiological ability to respond to environmental variability at multiple temporal and spatial scales. This manifests in the physical distribution of species being defined by their ability to withstand the stresses imposed by their local environment Evaluating the extent of variation in physiological response across environments is necessary for characterisation of evolutionary processes (Cutter et al, 2010)

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