AI Article Synopsis

  • Spring weather, particularly in temperate areas, can change quickly, impacting ectotherms like the alfalfa leafcutting bee, Megachile rotundata, whose optimal temperature range is crucial for their development and survival.
  • Researchers aimed to measure oxygen consumption across a wide temperature range (6-48°C) to assess how temperature affects metabolic rates in both male and female bees, revealing that only mass-specific rates showed sexual differences.
  • Findings indicate a non-linear metabolic response to temperature and highlight the importance of understanding these physiological changes to predict how M. rotundata may respond to climate change.

Article Abstract

Spring conditions, especially in temperate regions, may fluctuate abruptly and drastically. Environmental variability can expose organisms to temperatures outside of their optimal thermal ranges. For ectotherms, sudden changes in temperature may cause short- and long-term physiological effects, including changes in respiration, morphology, and reproduction. Exposure to variable temperatures during active development, which is likely to occur for insects developing in spring, can cause detrimental effects. Using the alfalfa leafcutting bee, Megachile rotundata, we aimed to determine if oxygen consumption could be measured using a new system and to test the hypothesis that female and male M. rotundata have a thermal performance curve with a wide optimal range. Oxygen consumption of M. rotundata pupae was measured across a large range of temperatures (6-48°C) using an optical oxygen sensor in a closed respirometry system. Absolute and mass-specific metabolic rates were calculated and compared between bees that were extracted from their brood cells and those remaining in the brood cell to determine whether pupae could be accurately measured inside their brood cells. The metabolic response to temperature was non-linear, which is an assumption of a thermal performance curve; however, the predicted negative slope at higher temperatures was not observed. Despite sexual dimorphism in body mass, sex differences only occurred in mass-specific metabolic rates. Higher metabolic rates in males may be attributed to faster development times, which could explain why there were no differences in absolute metabolic rate measurements. Understanding the physiological and ecological effects of thermal environmental variability on M. rotundata will help to better predict their response to climate change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10805150PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.060213DOI Listing

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