» Articles » PMID: 29062125

Thermal Limits to the Geographic Distributions of Shallow-water Marine Species

Overview
Journal Nat Ecol Evol
Publisher Springer Nature
Specialty Biology
Date 2017 Oct 25
PMID 29062125
Citations 36
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Temperature profoundly affects species' geographic ranges, but the extent to which it limits contemporary range edges has been difficult to assess from laboratory experiments of thermal tolerance. The persistence of populations depends on temperature-mediated outcomes of ecological and demographic processes across all stages of a species' life history, as well as any adaptation to local temperature regimes. We assessed the relationships between sea temperature and observed distributional ranges for 1,790 shallow-water marine species from 10 animal classes and found remarkable consistencies in trends in realized thermal limits among taxa and ocean basins, as well as general agreement with previous laboratory findings. Realized thermal niches increase from the Equator towards cold-temperate locations, despite an opposite trend in geographic range size. Species' cool distribution limits are best predicted by the magnitude of seasonality within their range, while a relatively firm thermal barrier exists on the equatorward range edge for temperate species. Our findings of consistencies in realized thermal limits indicate potential limits to adaptation among common marine species and highlight the value of realized thermal niches for predicting species' distributional dynamics in warming seas.

Citing Articles

Warming and cooling catalyse widespread temporal turnover in biodiversity.

Pinsky M, Hillebrand H, Chase J, Antao L, Hirt M, Brose U Nature. 2025; 638(8052):995-999.

PMID: 39880943 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08456-z.


Global analysis of the influence of environmental variables to explain ecological niches and realized thermal niche boundaries of sea snakes.

Patron-Rivero C, Osorio-Olvera L, Rojas-Soto O, Chiappa-Carrara X, Villalobos F, Bessesen B PLoS One. 2024; 19(12):e0310456.

PMID: 39636927 PMC: 11620380. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310456.


Method of estimating sea-surface paleotemperatures through biotic proxies: A case study in Upper Paleozoic paleoclimatic, paleogeographic and paleotectonic reconstructions of Siberia.

Davydov V, Karasev E, Popova E, Poletaev V Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(11):e70265.

PMID: 39512848 PMC: 11542995. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70265.


Coupling and de-coupling of the El Niño Southern Oscillation to the supply of larval fishes to benthic populations in the Hawaiian Islands.

Carlon D, Garcia S, Faucci A PLoS One. 2024; 19(10):e0312593.

PMID: 39446734 PMC: 11500875. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312593.


Regional thermal variation in a coral reef fish.

Schmidt E, Donelson J Conserv Physiol. 2024; 12(1):coae058.

PMID: 39139734 PMC: 11320370. DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coae058.