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Biogeographic parallels in thermal tolerance and gene expression variation under temperature stress in a widespread bumble bee. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global temperature changes highlight the importance of understanding how species, like bumble bees, adapt to thermal stress, with genetic mechanisms playing a key role in variation in thermal tolerance.
  • Research on Bombus vosnesenskii shows that critical thermal limits correlate strongly with local environmental conditions, particularly for cold tolerance, while high-temperature responses remain consistent across populations.
  • The study identifies specific gene expression patterns that reflect these thermal limits, suggesting that local adaptation may help bumble bees handle colder temperatures, but their responses to heat are more limited, relevant for understanding their reactions to climate change.

Article Abstract

Global temperature changes have emphasized the need to understand how species adapt to thermal stress across their ranges. Genetic mechanisms may contribute to variation in thermal tolerance, providing evidence for how organisms adapt to local environments. We determine physiological thermal limits and characterize genome-wide transcriptional changes at these limits in bumble bees using laboratory-reared Bombus vosnesenskii workers. We analyze bees reared from latitudinal (35.7-45.7°N) and altitudinal (7-2154 m) extremes of the species' range to correlate thermal tolerance and gene expression among populations from different climates. We find that critical thermal minima (CT) exhibit strong associations with local minimums at the location of queen origin, while critical thermal maximum (CT) was invariant among populations. Concordant patterns are apparent in gene expression data, with regional differentiation following cold exposure, and expression shifts invariant among populations under high temperatures. Furthermore, we identify several modules of co-expressed genes that tightly correlate with critical thermal limits and temperature at the region of origin. Our results reveal that local adaptation in thermal limits and gene expression may facilitate cold tolerance across a species range, whereas high temperature responses are likely constrained, both of which may have implications for climate change responses of bumble bees.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7553916PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73391-8DOI Listing

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