The converse to Bergmann's rule in bumblebees, a phylogenetic approach.

Ecol Evol

Lab. de Ecología; UBIPRO Facultad de Estudios Superiores Iztacala Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México A.P. 314 Tlalnepantla 54090 México México.

Published: September 2016

Two patterns commonly emerge when animal body size is analyzed as a function of latitudinal distribution. First, body size increases with latitude, a temperature effect known as Bergmann's rule, and second, the converse to Bergmann's rule, a pattern in which body size decreases with latitude. However, other geographic patterns can emerge when the mechanisms that generate Bergmann's and the converse to Bergmann's clines operate together. Here, we use phylogenetic comparative analysis in order to control for phylogenetic inertia, and we show that bumblebees exhibit the converse to Bergmann's rule. Bumblebee taxa are distributed worldwide in temperate and tropical regions. The largest species are found in places with high water availability during the driest time of the year. Nonetheless, large body size is constrained by extreme temperatures. Bumblebees' body size could be related to a higher extent to the size of food rewards to be harvested than to the energetic advantages of thermoregulation. Moreover, we found that the body size of eusocial and cuckoo species responded in the same way to environmental variables, suggesting that they have not diverged due to different selective pressures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5016639PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2321DOI Listing

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