2017
DOI: 10.1007/s00040-017-0585-4
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Day/night upper thermal limits differ within Ectatomma ruidum ant colonies

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…For example, ant species may preferentially forage in microhabitats (Baudier et al 2015;Kaspari and Weiser 2000), or during different times of the day (Stuble et al 2013), that best match their thermal requirements. This can include switching from diurnal to nocturnal activity (Nelson et al 2017). If this is the case, climate change is likely to have highly speciesspecific impacts on ant activity, given the variation among species in both thermal tolerance and foraging behaviour (Oberg et al 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, ant species may preferentially forage in microhabitats (Baudier et al 2015;Kaspari and Weiser 2000), or during different times of the day (Stuble et al 2013), that best match their thermal requirements. This can include switching from diurnal to nocturnal activity (Nelson et al 2017). If this is the case, climate change is likely to have highly speciesspecific impacts on ant activity, given the variation among species in both thermal tolerance and foraging behaviour (Oberg et al 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Simultaneously, colonies demonstrated overt diel shifts in thermal persistence in the absence of external temporal cues, supporting the Circadian Rhythm Hypothesis. While we found some differences in thermal performance associated with behavioral roles, the Division of Labor Hypothesis could not account for differences in thermal persistence based on time of day, even though that was the prior finding that led us to conduct the present study (Esch et al, 2017;Nelson et al, 2018). The authors of the earlier studies wondered how colonies of E. ruidum managed the thermal tolerance of foragers associated with diel changes in temperature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…We chose this approach because it is most representative of the biological phenomena we are investigating. After pilot experiments, we chose against estimating critical thermal maxima (CT max ) because this approach produces little intraspecific variance in this species (Esch et al, 2017;Nelson et al, 2018) and there is poor reproducibility (Ribeiro et al, 2012). In the thermal persistence assay, ants were individually loaded into 2 mL plastic microcentrifuge tubes and subjected to a constant temperate of 42ºC in a heating/cooling block (Tropicooler 260014, Boekel Scientific, Feasterville, PA, USA).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thermal traits were also not quantified in the original surveys during the mid‐90s, and thus, we cannot account for the potential of thermal traits plastically varying through time. Surely, documenting how CT max and CT min change daily, seasonally, and annually will be an important topic for future research (Nelson et al 2018, Bujan et al 2020 b ). That said, these 33 resurveys required two years and over three person‐years to collect and analyze.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%