Yes,
it's about habitat. No species can survive violent swings in
termperature
Temperature
swings may be bigger threat to life than increased warmth
By
Bill Hathaway
18
January, 2014
Insects
may thrive in the warmer average temperatures predicted by climate
models but are threatened by greater temperature variation also
anticipated in many areas around the globe, a Yale-led study predicts
in the Jan. 29 issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society of
London.
“There
has been some thought that many species will do better because of
rising average temperatures,” said David Vasseur, associate
professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, who headed the study.
“But when coupled with greater temperature variations, the story
changes.”
Scientists
have tested the impact of temperature on 38 species of insects.
Vasseur and researchers from eight other organizations coupled that
data with historic climate data and climate projections for 2050 to
2059 in order to assess effects of temperature variability. When only
mean temperature rise was considered, insects flourished, but
“greater variation impacted them negatively,” Vasseur said.
The
frequency of wide temperature swings will impact species like insects
more than larger-bodied species with longer lifespans, he said. Also
the study suggests effects of climate change on many species will
vary greatly by locale.
“Global
climate models predict many areas of temperate regions such as the
central Midwest and much of Europe will experience more climate
variation,” Vasseur said.
The
study was funded by the Canadian Institute for Ecology and Evolution
and the National Science Foundation.
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