Publications by authors named "Lauren K Neel"

AbstractTropical ectotherms are thought to be especially vulnerable to climate change because they have evolved in temporally stable thermal environments and therefore have decreased tolerance for thermal variability. Thus, they are expected to have narrow thermal tolerance ranges, live close to their upper thermal tolerance limits, and have decreased thermal acclimation capacity. Although models often predict that tropical forest ectotherms are especially vulnerable to rapid environmental shifts, these models rarely include the potential for plasticity of relevant traits.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied how new populations of slender anole lizards survive when moved to different islands in the Panama Canal.
  • They looked at factors like when the lizards were introduced and if there were other competing species on the islands.
  • Their research found that lizards introduced right before a drought struggled more, especially males, while females fared better in competition.
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As rising temperatures threaten biodiversity across the globe, tropical ectotherms are thought to be particularly vulnerable due to their narrow thermal tolerance ranges. Nevertheless, physiology-based models highlighting the vulnerability of tropical organisms rarely consider the contributions of their gut microbiota, even though microbiomes influence numerous host traits, including thermal tolerance. We combined field and lab experiments to understand the response of the slender anole lizard () gut microbiome to climatic shifts of various magnitude and duration.

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If fitness optima for a given trait differ between males and females in a population, sexual dimorphism may evolve. Sex-biased trait variation may affect patterns of habitat use, and if the microhabitats used by each sex have dissimilar microclimates, this can drive sex-specific selection on thermal physiology. Nevertheless, tests of differences between the sexes in thermal physiology are uncommon, and studies linking these differences to microhabitat use or behavior are even rarer.

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  • Invasive species can cause significant harm to ecosystems and economies due to their rapid population growth, often aided by a phenomenon called 'enemy release,' where they encounter fewer natural predators or parasites.
  • A study involved translocating mite-infested slender anole lizards to different islands to observe the effects of native anole populations on mite parasitism and lizard population dynamics over several generations.
  • Results showed that on islands with only one species of anole, mite populations went extinct, while lizards on islands with two species retained their mites; the two-species island had the highest overall lizard biomass but the lowest density of the introduced species, suggesting that native species can act as 'enemy reservoirs' and somewhat limit invasive
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Conservation and management activities are geared toward the achievement of particular goals for a specific species, or groups of species, at the population level or higher. Conversely, organismal or functional research is typically organized by hypothesis tests or descriptive work that examines a broader theory studying individual organismal traits. Here, we outline how integrative organismal biologists might conduct mutually beneficial and meaningful research to inform or assist conservation and management biologists.

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Phenotypic flexibility may facilitate range expansion by allowing organisms to maintain high levels of performance when introduced to novel environments. Phenotypic flexibility, such as reversible acclimatization, permits organisms to achieve high performance over a wide range of environmental conditions, without the costly allocation or acquisition tradeoffs associated with behavioral thermoregulation, which may expedite range expansion in introduced species. The northern curly-tailed lizard, , was introduced to the USA in the 1940s and is now established in southern Florida.

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The nervous system acts as a biological thermostat by controlling behaviors that regulate the warming and cooling of animals. We review the structures responsible for thermoregulation in three model species: roundworms (Caenorhabditis elegans), flies (Drosophila melanogaster), and rats (Rattus novegicus). We then consider additional features of the nervous system required to explain adaptive plasticity of the set-point temperature and the precision of thermoregulation.

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