The Earth's climate is changing with a trend towards higher mean temperatures and increased temperature fluctuations. Little attention has been paid to the effects of thermal variation on competition within species. Understanding the temperature-dependence of competition is important since it might affect dynamics within and between populations. In a laboratory experiment we investigated the effects of thermal variation on growth and cannibalism in larvae of a damselfly. The temperature treatments included three amplitudes between 20 and 26 °C with an average of 23 °C, and a constant control at 23 °C. Larvae were also raised at five constant temperatures for an estimation of the thermal performance curve, which showed that the thermal optimum for growth was 26.9 °C. Cannibalism was significantly positively correlated with initial body size variance. There was neither a difference among the temperature variation treatments, nor between the constant and the variation treatments in growth and cannibalism. Hence, positive and negative effects of temperature variation within the linear range of a species thermal performance curve might cancel each other out. Since our study mimicked natural temperature conditions, we suggest that the increase in temperature variation predicted by climate models will not necessarily differ from the effects without an increase in variation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-17192-1 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
December 2024
Baruch Marine Field Laboratory, University of South Carolina, Georgetown, SC, United States of America.
Habitat partitioning can promote coexistence of closely related competitors. Two congeneric shrimps (brown shrimp, Penaeus aztecus, and white shrimp, Penaeus setiferus) which utilize estuaries in the southeastern U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArXiv
November 2024
School of Mathematics and Statistical Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ.
Front Oncol
October 2024
Department of Gastroenterology, The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University (Zhejiang Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine), Hangzhou, China.
Objective: In 2007, entosis was proposed as a form of programmed cell death, distinct from apoptosis. This process involves a living cell (internalized cell) actively invading a neighboring live cell of the same type (host cell), forming a cell-in-cell structure. Recently, entosis has been increasingly associated with cancer, leading to significant advancements in research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
November 2024
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Type VII protein secretion systems play an important role in the survival and virulence of pathogens and in the competition among some microbes. Potential polymorphic toxin substrates of the type VII secretion system (T7SS) in are important for competition in the context of biofilm communities. Within a biofilm, there is significant physiological heterogeneity as cells within the population take on differential cell fates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
December 2024
Marine Ecology Research Group, School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Compensatory density-dependent (DD) processes play an integral role in fisheries management by underpinning fundamental population demographics. However, DD processes are often assessed only for specific life stages, likely resulting in misleading evaluations of population limitations. Here, we assessed the relative roles of intra- and inter-life stage DD interactions in shaping the population dynamics of perennial freshwater fish with demographically open populations.
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