Chronic and acute thermal stressors have non-additive effects on fertility
Natalie Pilakouta,
Daniel Allan,
Ellie Moore
et al.
Abstract:Climate change is driving both higher mean temperatures and a greater likelihood of heatwaves, which are becoming longer and more intense. Previous work has looked at these two types of thermal stressors in isolation, focusing on the effects of either a small, long-term increase in temperature or a large, short-term increase in temperature. Yet, a fundamental gap in our understanding is the combined effect of chronic and acute thermal stressors and, in particular, its impact on vital processes such as reproduc… Show more
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