Abstract
Understanding the potential of animals to immediately respond to changing temperatures is imperative for predicting the effects of climate change on biodiversity. Ectothermic animals, such as insects, use behavioural thermoregulation to keep their body temperature within suitable limits. It may be particularly important at warm margins of species occurrence, where populations are sensitive to increasing air temperatures. In the field, we studied thermal requirements and behavioural thermoregulation in low-altitude populations of the Satyrinae butterflies Erebia aethiops, E. euryale and E. medusa. We compared the relationship of individual body temperature with air and microhabitat temperatures for the low-altitude Erebia species to our data on seven mountain species, including a high-altitude population of E. euryale, studied in the Alps. We found that the grassland butterfly E. medusa was well adapted to the warm lowland climate and it was active under the highest air temperatures and kept the highest body temperature of all species. Contrarily, the woodland species, E. aethiops and a low-altitude population of E. euryale, kept lower body temperatures and did not search for warm microclimates as much as other species. Furthermore, temperature-dependence of daily activities also differed between the three low-altitude and the mountain species. Lastly, the different responses to ambient temperature between the low- and high-altitude populations of E. euryale suggest possible local adaptations to different climates. We highlight the importance of habitat heterogeneity for long-term species survival, because it is expected to buffer climate change consequences by providing a variety of microclimates, which can be actively explored by adults. Alpine species can take advantage of warm microclimates, while low-altitude grassland species may retreat to colder microhabitats to escape heat, if needed. However, we conclude that lowland populations of woodland species may be more severely threatened by climate warming because of the unavailability of relatively colder microclimates.
Introduction
Ongoing climate changes induce range shifts of many animals and plants [1,2], however species responses to climate change are individualistic. At the population level, they adapt by evolutionary changes [3–5]. These adaptive responses to environmental changes contribute to the demarcation of current species distribution ranges and also induce diversification. Selective pressure of large environmental changes leads to shifts of allele frequencies of genes responsible for physiological functions [3], and creates a phylogenetic signal in genus-level phylogenies [6, 7]. At the individual level, animals acclimate [8], adjust their phenology [9], and use a wide repertoire of behaviours to regulate their body temperature [4, 10].
Behavioral plasticity of ectotherms enables them to keep their body temperature at the optimal level and thus to optimize functioning of their physiological processes at short time scales [10]. Behavioural thermoregulation works mainly by changes in the timing of daily activities or exploration of various (micro) habitats [11–13]. The ability to use locally suitable microhabitats facilitates species survival under ongoing climate change [10]. Ectotherms search for warmer microclimates at the cold margins [12, 14] and decrease activity or search for shade at the warm margins of occurrence [15–18]. The comparison of species responses at contrasting climatic range margins, such as low-vs. high-altitude margins, may empower effective targeting of conservation activities, especially in declining species with limited potential for range shifts [2, 19, 20].
Despite the great behavioural plasticity of many species, responses to climate change may be limited by various constraints. For example, tropical lizards of forest interiors suffer from a higher risk of overheating than their open-habitat congeners [21]. Under a climate warming scenario, open-habitat species have the potential to explore novel habitat types in the forest interior by adjusting their microhabitat use while forest-dwellers have little chance of doing so because they already occupy the coolest available microhabitats [21]. Despite many obvious advantages of behavioural plasticity as a rapid way to respond to environmental changes [10], behavioural thermoregulation could also limit physiological adaptation, which is necessary for species' long-term survival [8, 22, 23]. Whether this so-called ˮBogertˮ effect has a general validity is not yet clear, but it represents an important possibility, with implications for predicting climate change effects.
Organisms living at high altitudes were among the first to attract considerable attention to the issues of species survival under climate change because of apparent range shifts along altitudinal gradients [1, 24, 25]. However, recent studies report that lowland fauna seem to be even more sensitive to ongoing climate change than mountain species. Detailed studies of internal traits such as immune system [26], thermoregulation [21] or thermal limits [27] surprisingly report higher sensitivity of lowland species to increasing temperatures. Moreover, also extrinsic factors such as existence of extremely diverse (micro)habitats and topographies [2, 14, 28], or feasibility of uphill shifts along the altitudinal gradient [2], support long-term survival of species in the mountains. On the contrary, lowlands provide a more homogeneous environment; in addition, they are fully exposed to human activities such as agriculture, forestry and urbanization. In concordance, a large comparative study by Roth et al. [2] showed that mountain assemblages are more stable, i.e. less vulnerable, than lowland ones in relation to climate change.
Here, we focus on thermal ecology and microclimate utilisation at high- and low-altitude margins of occurrence in adult butterflies of the genus Erebia. Alpine Erebia species are well adapted to extreme high-altitude environments, where they are able to maximize activity during short periods of favourable weather and they do not seem to be at risk of overheating in a warming environment [14]. However, the situation in aberrant lowland species and populations of this mostly mountain genus is not known. Thus, we examined thermoregulatory strategies in adults of two lowland species at the upper thermal margins of their occurrence and of a low-altitude mountain population of a montane-belt species. We compared our findings with data on seven alpine species reported in [14]. We discuss the role of behavioural thermoregulation and physiological adaptations of lowland and mountain species of Erebia for dealing with climate change.
Materials and Methods
Study group and study sites
The genus Erebia Dalman, 1816 is a popular group in studies of eco-physiological adaptations [14, 29] and biogeography [30–32], as well a subject of increasing interest from the conservation perspective [14, 18, 33–36]. In our study, we compared thermoregulation of seven alpine species occurring at high altitudes in the European Alps (see [14] for more details) with thermoregulation of a low-altitude population of a mountain species E. euryale (Esper, 1805), and two aberrant lowland species, E. aethiops (Esper, 1777) and E. medusa (Fabricius, 1787). No specific permissions were required for this project because it did not involve any protected species and the field work took place outside of any protected areas. The field work was carried out on public land, hence, no access permissions were needed.
Mountain species
The seven alpine species Erebia alberganus (Prunner, 1798), E. euryale (Esper, 1805), E. ligea (Linnaeus, 1758), E.melampus (Fuessly, 1775), E. montana (de Prunner, 1798), E. pandrose (Borkhausen, 1788) and E. cassioides (Reiner and Hohenwarth, 1792) were studied in the Austrian Alps, Tirol, close to the town of Sölden, at an altitude of 1500-1800 m a.s.l. (see [14] for more details). These species occur in montane and alpine vegetation belts [37]. Another, low-altitude, population of E. euryale was studied in the Šumava Mts., Czech Republic, close to Borová Lada village, in the area of a former village, Zahrádky (13.68032°E,48.97362°Ν, altitude 930 m a.s.l.). E. euryale inhabits clearings and road margins within spruce forest in the area and was frequently observed nectaring on nearby pastures. The species E. euryale was thus represented by two populations: by a high-altitude population from the Austrian Alps (E. euryale-Alps) and by a low-altitude population from the Šumava Mts., Czech Republic (E. euryale-CZ).
Lowland species
E. aethiops and E. medusa inhabit a rather wide range of altitudes from lowlands to sub-alpine zones [37]. Both lowland species originated during Miocene diversification of a European clade of the genus Erebia and they are members of a phylogenetically distinct species group [32]. Their conservation status is Least Concern for Europe [38], but both species have experienced local declines throughout their ranges [39, 40] attributed to habitat alteration [18, 36]. Moreover, both species are hypothesized to be negatively affected by ongoing climate change [17, 41]. We studied their lowland populations in an ex-military area, Vyšný, in the vicinity of the town of Český Krumlov, SW Czech Republic (48°49’N, 14°1’E, altitude 550 m a.s.l.). The area includes a mosaic of dry grasslands, shrubs and woodlands. Both species co-occur in this relatively warm and dry area, probably on their upper thermal limits. E. aethiops (flight period: mid-June to August) is a woodland species, which inhabits forest edges, small grassland patches and sparse woodlands within the area [17, 18], while E. medusa (flight period: May to mid-July) is found in more open habitats - xeric grasslands with scattered shrubs.
Measurements of body, microhabitat and air temperatures
Butterfly body temperature Tb was measured by a hypodermic micro-needle probe (0.3 mm in diameter) within 5 seconds after capture and values were recorded on Physitemp thermometer (model BAT-12) during August 2010 (E. aethiops), May 2012 (E. medusa), July 2012 (E. aethiops, E. euryale-CZ) and August 2012 (E. euryale-CZ). The alpine species were measured during their flight periods in 2010 and 2011 (see [14]). Butterflies were collected by a net during random walks within the study area during the entire daytime activity period (between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.). During measurement, the microprobe was inserted into a butterfly’s thorax; the butterfly and the microprobe were shaded during the measurement. The same thermometer was used to measure microclimate Tm and air Ta temperatures. Microclimate temperature Tm was measured immediately after Tb measurement at the place where the butterfly was located before the capture (approximately 3 mm above substrate in the case of sitting or nectaring butterflies). Air temperature Ta was measured at 1.5 m above ground by a shaded thermometer. Further, we classified individual behaviour prior to capture into three categories: sitting, nectaring and flight. All data on Czech butterflies are available in S1 File, data from Austria are available in [14] (Appendix A).
Data analyses
The aim of our analyses was to compare thermoregulation of related butterflies occurring in mountains and in lowlands. All analyses were conducted in R 3.0.2 [42]. First, we tested the dependence of body temperature Tb on microhabitat Tm and air Ta temperatures using Generalized Additive Models (GAMs) with cubic splines and maximal complexity of the fitted relationship set to k = 5 d.f. in mgcv 1.8-4 package for R [43]. The two relationships (Tb ~Ta and Tb ~Tm) were fitted for individual species (lowland and alpine populations of E. euryale were analysed separately). Data on alpine species reported by [14] were re-analysed the same way to facilitate comparison with the lowland species (the original conclusions of [14] were not affected).
We also searched for differences in active behavioural thermoregulation between lowland and mountain species. We estimated the difference between microhabitat and air temperatures Tm — Ta for settling and nectaring individuals (i.e. potentially actively thermoregulating) of each low-altitude and mountain species (separately for the two populations of E. euryale). Then, we used t-tests to test whether lowland species and E. euryale population also search for similarly warm microclimates as the alpine species [14].
Last, we tested how the proportion of settling, nectaring and flying individuals for individual species depends on air temperatures Ta using GAMs with quasibinomial distribution. This analysis was conducted for the three types of behaviour and all lowland and mountain species/populations separately.
Results
The two lowland species, E. medusa and E. aethiops, experienced higher maximal and higher minimal air temperatures Ta than the seven mountain species studied (Fig. 1, Fig. 2A, Table 1). The low-altitude population of E. euryale-CZ experienced similar maximal air temperatures Ta but ca 5°C higher minimal air temperatures Ta compared to the alpine population of E. euryale (Fig. 2A). In spite of these differences in experienced air temperatures Ta, experienced maximal microhabitat temperatures Tm did not differ in species across different altitudes (Fig. 2B). Thus, alpine species were able to detect awarmer microclimate to compensate for the experienced low air temperatures (Fig. 3). Minimal microhabitat temperatures Tm were higher in the lowland species corresponding to the generally warmer lowland environment.
Body temperatures Tb increased with slight deviations from linearity with increasing air temperatures Ta as well as with increasing microhabitat temperatures Tm in all species (Fig. 1, Fig. 2, Table 2). However, E. euryale-CZ and E. aethiops kept lower Tb at similar Ta than all other species, i.e. species from the Alps and also E. medusa (Fig. 2). Especially E. aethiops kept its body temperature only several C above the air temperature Ta and had Tb almost equal to Ta at high Ta values (Fig. 1). The lowland population of E. euryale-CZ and E. aethiops had a lesser tendency to heat up at given air temperatures Ta than the other species. E. aethiops slowly increased its Tb compared to Ta in a range of air temperatures 15-20°C and, after reaching the optimum around Ta = 21°C, the difference between its Tb and Ta decreased again (Fig. 2A; compare the fitted curve to the dashed line denoting Tb = Ta). It seems that E. aethiops thus has a narrow temperature range for activity compared to the other species. Contrary, E. medusa had thermoregulatory characteristics similar to the alpine species (Fig. 2). These species increased their Tb more at low than at high Ta, which suggests active thermoregulation by microclimate choice or body posture adjustment under low air temperatures.
Differences in body temperatures between the three low-altitude species/populations and the alpine species were significant based on a comparison of AIC of GAMs with and without the location as a grouping factor. The model of the dependence of Tb on Ta including the distinction between the low-altitude and the alpine sites had a lower AIC (ΔAIC = –382), differences between individual species included as a grouping factor were also highly significant (ΔAIC = –722). The same results hold for the dependence of Tb on Tm (ΔAIC = –266 for the effect of location and ΔAIC = –598 for the effect of species identity). Repeating the analysis with a subset of the data pertaining only to E. euryale yielded a significant difference between the low-altitude (E. euryale-CZ) and alpine (E. euryale-ALPS) populations (ΔAIC = –97 for the dependence of Tb on Ta and ΔAIC = –85 for the dependence of Tb on Tm).
Analysis of the thermoregulatory behaviour during sitting or nectaring showed that E. aethiops and E. euryale-CZ did not search for warm microclimates as much as the other species did (Fig. 3, Table 3). In E. medusa, the difference between microhabitat and air temperatures Tm – Ta during sitting and nectaring was more similar to the alpine species. Moreover, E. medusa explored microhabitat temperatures up to 32°C (Fig. 3C), the highest of all species studied. Excepting E. aethiops, Erebia species searched for warmer microclimates than the ambient air, i.e. Tm > Ta (Fig. 3). E. aethiops explored microhabitats which were similarly warm as the air (Fig. 3B), suggesting heat-avoidance behaviour. The high-altitude population of E. euryale searched for microhabitats on an average of 2.00 °C warmer than the air, while its low-altitude population was found in microhabitats on an average of only 0.64 °C warmer than the air.
The proportion of settling, nectaring or flying individuals was dependent on air temperature Ta at least for one of these behavioural categories in E. aethiops, E. euryale-Alps, E. ligea, E. montana and E. medusa (Table 3, Fig. 4). Settling (i.e. various forms of basking behavior and resting) was the most frequent behaviour at low air temperatures (Fig. 4). The frequency of nectaring increased with increasing air temperatures in species from the Alps, but was hump-shaped in E. aethiops and E. medusa. The frequency of flying was nearly constant in all species, with the exception of E. aethiops which displayed an increase in the proportion of flying individuals with increasing air temperature.
Discussion
Thermoregulatory strategies at thermal margins
Behaviour has the potential to modify physiological responses to evolutionary pressures such as the ongoing climate change [8, 44, 45]. Small ectothermic animals have to decrease their activity or rely on shade seeking behaviour to avoid overheating at the upper thermal margins of their range [10]. Interspecific differences in behavioural thermoregulation (e.g. species’ ability to explore colder microclimates in the woodland understorey) could modify the effect of extreme air temperatures and lead to different responses to external thermal constraints. Our results demonstrate that adults of low-altitude populations of E. aethiops and E. medusa, species of a mostly cold-dwelling butterfly genus, diversified in their thermoregulatory strategies and tolerance to high-temperatures (Fig. 2). We hypothesize that this differentiation of thermoregulatory strategies was driven by contrasting habitat preferences of these two species, similarly as has been observed for Mediterranean cicadas [46, 47], tropical lizards [21] or mountain species of the genus Erebia [14]. We also found differences between low-altitude and alpine populations of E. euryale, which probably reflect local adaptations to different climates. These local differences suggest that behavioural thermoregulation of adults is not able to buffer environmental pressures completely.
E. aethiops, which inhabits heterogeneous forest-steppe environments [18], did not actively enhance its body temperature and altered its activity in hot weather (see also [17]). E. aethiops was frequently observed flying in the shadow of trees during the warmest part of the day [17]. In contrast to other Erebia species studied, it showed a lack of selectivity for microhabitats warmer than the ambient air (Fig. 3). Furthermore, it was the only Erebia species in which the proportion of flying individuals increased at the highest air temperatures (Fig. 4). We observed them flying mostly among trees and shrubs (see also [17]), which may serve to decrease body temperature, although there may be a range of other factors shaping the activity pattern, such as behaviour related to reproduction. E. aethiops mainly settled on vegetation during the lowest air temperatures experienced (15-20ºC). However, these air temperatures are suitable for activity for the other Erebia species; alpine relatives were found in flight at temperatures as low as 12ºC [14]. Settling during temperatures potentially suitable for activity may be conditioned by resting in a colder microclimate under shrubs and trees [17] and by a lower effort to warm up in this species. E. aethiops displayed a shift of activity to higher temperatures than other species also in nectaring (Fig. 4).
Contrary to E. aethiops, E. medusa, a species of more open grasslands, effectively heated up under low air temperature and linearly enhanced its body temperature up to 39°C; i.e., higher than other Erebia species (see also [14]). These differences illustrate that species with an ancestral cold-climate preference [32] have the potential to adjust to environmental conditions in warm lowlands and that behavioural traits, such as habitat use, determine species’ thermal preferences and may affect their responses to predicted climate warming. Indeed, species living in cold climates generally seem to retain relatively high upper thermal tolerance limits, and they differ from species living in warmer climates mostly by their unique tolerance to cold [48]. In agreement, our data further show that the body temperatures of E. aethiops and the low-altitude population of E. euryale differed from the other species mostly under low microhabitat temperatures, while they were similar under higher temperatures (Fig. 1E-H, Fig. 2B), which points to different physiological responses to cold rather than to heat.
Both lowland species experienced higher maximal air temperatures (around 30ºC) than their mountain congeners (Fig. 4) because of differences in local climates. It seems that the extreme temperatures limited nectaring of the two lowland species. E. aethiops reached the peak of its nectaring activity around 24ºC and E. medusa around 26ºC. The decrease of nectaring activities of the lowland species during the warmest periods of the day, not observed in the mountain species, could be caused by desiccation of nectar or by the need of the butterflies to prevent overheating. Thus, the timing of diurnal activities may contribute to the Erebia thermoregulation together with microhabitat choice [17, 49] and facilitate species survival on their range margins. However, laboratory measurements of thermal tolerance traits will be necessary to properly evaluate the effect of thermal extremes on different species.
Behavioural thermoregulation and evolutionary adaptation to climate change
Long-term persistence in a changing climate requires adaptations such as adjustments of physiological mechanisms responsible for thermal tolerance. It is possible that behavioural thermoregulation, which is a potent short-term solution for dealing with a changing climate, constrains the adaptive potential of behaviourally plastic species by buffering the selective pressure of temperature [22]. This would lead to a limited potential to adapt to climate change by evolution of physiological traits [8].This phenomenon has been termed the “Bogert effect” and supporting evidence comes from lizards [8, 22, 23] as well as invertebrates, e.g. Drosophila [50], although other studies dispute its general applicability [51]. However, there is a large amount of evidence that behavioural plasticity, and phenotypic plasticity in general, can drive rather than prevent evolutionary changes (reviewed in [52,53]). The effects of behavioural plasticity on evolution are likely context-dependent and may differ between different traits. Adults of Erebia butterflies thermoregulate behaviourally but their thermoregulatory strategies and preferred body temperatures are not conserved according to our data; i.e. individual species have different requirements, which does not provide support for the Bogert effect in Erebia.
According to our measurements, responses to temperature also differed between populations of E. euryale from two sites differing in climate. The low-altitude population E. euryale-CZ (900m a.s.l.) kept lower body temperatures than the high-altitude population E. euryale-Alps (1800m a.s.l.) at comparable ambient temperatures (Fig. 2). This suggests that the lowland population is more "lazy" in warming up and its activity is constrained to periods of the day with optimal air temperature. In contrast, mountain species are limited by a shorter time window of favourable temperatures, so they need to be active whenever possible. In a similar case in grasshoppers, Samietz et al. [54] found that individuals increased their body temperatures via mobility and basking more at higher altitudes and demonstrated that this was due to local adaptation. Evidence of local adaptation in thermoregulation was found also in butterflies [55, 56], lizards [21, 44, 57], and other taxa. An alternative explanation for the observed differences between E. euryale populations is phenotypic plasticity. Resolving the relative contributions of these interacting factors requires transplant or laboratory experiments [54, 58]. It is also important to note that main selective agents driving the evolution of thermoregulatory strategies are temperature extremes, rather than long-term means, and that maximal temperatures seem to be more limiting than minimal temperatures in terrestrial ectotherms [59]. Also, there is mounting evidence that tolerance to heat does not evolve as easily as tolerance to cold [44, 48]. Moreover, the effect of temperature may differ across developmental stages, which needs to be investigated [60].
Habitat heterogeneity and species survival in a changing climate
Habitat heterogeneity provides opportunities for species of ectotherms with flexible behaviour, such as Erebia butterflies studied here, to find a suitable microclimate and to obtain the resources they require. The butterflies can adjust their microhabitat use and shift the timing of various activities. Thus, habitat heterogeneity may be a key to their survival in a changing climate [61]. Mountain species may explore warmer microhabitats to enhance their body temperature [14], while lowland species have the possibility to retreat to the shade in case the weather gets too hot. Whereas mountain landscapes provide heterogeneity by their rugged terrain, lowlands are more prone to landscape homogenization and suffer from higher human pressure [62]. Lowland species living in woodlands, such as E. aethiops [18], may thus be more endangered by a combination of landscape homogenization and climate change than alpine species or species of open grasslands, such as E. medusa. They might be both more sensitive to high temperatures because of their lower preferred temperatures [14] and have limited opportunities for microhabitat shifts, e.g. more intensive shade seeking would be difficult because they already inhabit relatively cold microhabitats [21]. On the other hand, it could be expected that under climate warming, a grassland species such as E. medusa would retreat to woodlands which provide shade. Indeed, this species inhabits such habitats in some parts of its range [39]. It remains to be tested whether its local habitat preferences correlate with the local climate.
It is important to highlight that there are other factors associated with climate change, such as changes in precipitation and snow cover. These factors may modify the effects of temperature and affect different developmental stages. Our study focused only on adults, without considering eggs, larvae, and pupae. It is already known, however, that the effect of temperature may differ across developmental stages [60], which needs to be investigated further. Environmental conditions experienced by larvae are to a certain degree predetermined by adult behaviour. For example, in Euphydryas editha, differences in adult phenology and egg placement by ovipositioning females lead to differences in the thermal environment experienced by larvae [13]. Not only adults, but also larvae can thermoregulate behaviourally [63], but not during the winter when they are dormant. Snow provides insulation during overwintering, and thus affects the survival of dormant stages. Decreasing snow cover may thus adversely affect butterflies by increasing frost-related larval mortality during overwintering [29, 35, 64]. Data on tolerances of all stages to temperature and other key environmental factors are thus necessary to reveal the main selective pressures [45, 65, 66] and to better understand the often varied responses of species to climate change [67].
Supporting Information
S1 File
Raw data
The file contains measurements of body temperature, air temperature, microhabitat temperature, and behaviour prior to capture of Erebia aethiops, E. euryale, and E. medusa studied in the Czech Republic.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank D. Novotný and J. Peltanová for help with data collection in the field and to M. Konvička for inspiring discussions on butterfly ecology and conservation. Both JK and IK are supported by the Czech Science Foundation (projects GP14-10035P and GA14-33733S). We also thank two reviewers for their thoughtful comments and Matthew Sweney for proofreading the manuscript.