Abstract
The adult tenebrionid beetle Upis ceramboides overwinters in the northern taiga forests of North America in a hibernaculum typically just beneath loose tree bark above the snowline. The beetles may be exposed to temperatures as low as −55°C, which is approximately the lower limit of cold tolerance found in specimens collected in mid-winter. Supercooling points average −6.3°C throughout the year and, contrary to expectation, show no seasonal variation in spite of major alterations in haemolymph composition and freezing tolerance. Summer beetles are incapable of withstanding temperatures below the supercooling point but freezing tolerance increases during the fall (September–November) and the lower lethal temperature (LLT) is maintained at ca. −55°C until March, after which it gradually rises to the summer level of −6°C. Changes in freezing tolerance are closely associated with seasonal alterations in the polyhydric alcohols sorbitol and threitol. Neither polyol is present in measureable amount during summer; sorbitol accumulates to an average haemolymph concentration of 0.44 M/l in winter and threitol reaches 0.25 M/l. Summer beetles contain about 14% more water than beetles collected during the other seasons. Upis ceramboides thus undergoes unique seasonal changes in physical and chemical characteristics that enable it to tolerate severe, prolonged subfreezing temperatures.
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