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Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
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Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
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Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited

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Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited
Journal Article

Geographical clines of body size in terrestrial amphibians: water conservation hypothesis revisited

2016
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Overview
Aim: Faced with the dispute regarding spatial gradients of body size in ectotherms, we build upon their long-known allometric relationship with water economy, which scales with thermal and hydric regimes, to revisit and refine the water conservation hypothesis (WCH). We provide a brief description of the WCH, including its physiological basis and geographical predictions for body size clines in terrestrial amphibians, and test it against heat-based hypotheses in four amphibian clades. Location: The Americas. Methods: We employ phylogenetic comparative analyses to examine relationships between body size and both temperature, as a descriptor of the effect of heat alone, and potential evapotranspiration, which describes the water constraint along evaporative gradients. We assess these relationships in four amphibian clades: the subfamily of leaf frogs (Phyllomedusinae), genera of gladiator frogs (Hypsiboas), salamanders (Plethodon) and the family of glass frogs (Centrolenidae). Results: Three clades did not show phylogenetic signals in body size variation. In addition, three clades showed a positive relationship with potential evapotranspiration as predicted, and all of them were unrelated to temperature. When present, however, the explanatory power of evaporative energy on body size variation was relatively weak. Main conclusions: The conservation of water across evaporative gradients is both a more comprehensive explanation and a more pervasive driver of spatial clines in body size among terrestrial amphibians than is the balance of heat alone. However, the relatively low predictive ability of evaporative energy and its dependence on specific climatic configurations both emphasize and elucidate the non-universality of the phenomenon.