Abstract

For organisms with complex life cycles, climate change can have both direct effects and indirect effects that are mediated through plastic responses to temperature and that carry over beyond the developmental environment. We examined multiple responses to environmental warming in a dragonfly, a species whose life history bridges aquatic and terrestrial environments. We tested larval survival under warming and whether warmer conditions can create carry-over effects between life history stages. Rearing dragonfly larvae in an experimental warming array to simulate increases in temperature, we contrasted the effects of the current thermal environment with temperatures +2.5°C and +5°C above ambient, temperatures predicted for 50 and 100 years in the future for the study region. Aquatic mesocosms were stocked with dragonfly larvae (Erythemis collocata) and we followed survival of larvae to adult emergence. We also measured the effects of warming on the timing of the life history transition to the adult stage, body size of adults, and the relative size of their wings, an aspect of morphology key to flight performance. There was a trend toward reduced larval survival with increasing temperature. Warming strongly affected the phenology of adult emergence, advancing emergence by up to a month compared with ambient conditions. Additionally, our warmest conditions increased variation in the timing of adult emergence compared with cooler conditions. The increased variation with warming arose from an extended emergence season with fewer individuals emerging at any one time. Altered emergence patterns such as we observed are likely to place individuals emerging outside the typical season at greater risk from early and late season storms and will reduce effective population sizes during the breeding season. Contrary to expectations for ectotherms, body size was unaffected by warming. However, morphology was affected: at +5°C, dragonflies emerging from mesocosms had relatively smaller wings. This provides some of the first evidence that the effects of climate change on animals during their growth can have carry-over effects in morphology that will affect performance of later life history stages. In dragonflies, relatively smaller wings are associated with reduced flight performance, creating a link between larval thermal conditions and adult dispersal capacity.

Highlights

  • Climate change is altering temperature in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, and will influence the conditions in which organisms develop and function

  • Increased temperatures during development have been shown to increase mortality (McCauley et al 2015, Tseng and O’Connor 2015), cause faster developmental rates which can result in reductions in adult body size (Daufresne et al 2009, Gardner et al 2011, Sheridan and Bickford 2011), and to advance seasonal phenologies (Parmesan 2006, Diez et al 2012)

  • This allows us to assess whether the animals we examined exhibit the relationship between temperature and adult body size predict by the temperature-size rule (TSR)

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is altering temperature in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, and will influence the conditions in which organisms develop and function. Developing in warmer environments can cause organisms to respond in ways that alter their traits and performance in ways that may affect population dynamics, potentially threatening the persistence of populations and species (Thomas et al 2004, Parmesan 2006). Advanced phenologies can either have negative effects (Inouye 2008, Augspurger 2013), or similar to range shifts, advanced phenologies can allow species to temporally shift their life-history to maintain populations in habitats with new thermal regimes (O’Regan et al 2014). If adults are smaller as a result of developing in warmer conditions, this may affect the ability of species to shift their ranges in response to climate change by altering the dispersal capacity of individuals (McCauley and Mabry 2011). Measuring multiple responses to predicted climate change scenarios will provide critical insights into the effects of warming on organismal performance

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