4.5 Article

Temperature dependence of locomotor performance in the tropical clawed frog, Xenopus tropicalis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 215, Issue 14, Pages 2465-2470

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.069765

Keywords

temperature; endurance; swimming; jumping; frog; climate change; Silurana; Anura

Categories

Funding

  1. l'Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) MOBIGEN [ANR-09-PEXT-003]
  2. Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle Action transversale du Museum (MNHN ATM) grant of the programme 'Biodiversite actuelle et fossile'
  3. Marie Curie reintegration grant [FP7-PEOPLE-IRG-2008] [239257]

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Amphibians are ideal taxa with which to investigate the effects of climate change on physiology, dispersal capacity and distributional ranges as their physiological performance and fitness is highly dependent on temperature. Moreover, amphibians are among the most endangered vertebrate taxa. Here we use the tropical clawed frog, Xenopus tropicalis, as a model system to explore effects of temperature on locomotor performance. Our analyses show that locomotion is thermally sensitive, as illustrated by significant effects of temperature on terrestrial exertion capacity (time until exhaustion) and aquatic burst speed (maximal burst swimming velocity and maximal burst swimming acceleration capacity). Exertion performance measures had relatively lower temperature optima and narrower performance breadth ranges than measures of burst speed. The narrow 80% performance breadths confirm predictions that animals from stable environments should display high thermal sensitivity and, combined with the divergent temperature optima for exertion capacity and burst speed, underscore the vulnerability of tropical species such as X. tropicalis to even relatively small temperature changes. The temperature sensitivity of locomotor performance traits in X. tropicalis suggests that tropical ectotherms may be impacted by predicted changes in climate.

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