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Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
by
Fenberg, Phillip B
, Langdon, Peter G
, Brooks, Stephen J
, Price, Benjamin W
, Rungtip, Wonglersak
in
Ambient temperature
/ Animal behavior
/ Animal reproduction
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic insects
/ Body size
/ Case studies
/ Climate change
/ Emergence
/ Environmental changes
/ Insects
/ Interspecific
/ Laboratories
/ Length
/ Males
/ Mesocosms
/ Polypedilum sordens
/ Ponds
/ Precipitation
/ Regression analysis
/ Sensitivity
/ Species
/ Success
/ Temperature
/ Wings
2021
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Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
by
Fenberg, Phillip B
, Langdon, Peter G
, Brooks, Stephen J
, Price, Benjamin W
, Rungtip, Wonglersak
in
Ambient temperature
/ Animal behavior
/ Animal reproduction
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic insects
/ Body size
/ Case studies
/ Climate change
/ Emergence
/ Environmental changes
/ Insects
/ Interspecific
/ Laboratories
/ Length
/ Males
/ Mesocosms
/ Polypedilum sordens
/ Ponds
/ Precipitation
/ Regression analysis
/ Sensitivity
/ Species
/ Success
/ Temperature
/ Wings
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
by
Fenberg, Phillip B
, Langdon, Peter G
, Brooks, Stephen J
, Price, Benjamin W
, Rungtip, Wonglersak
in
Ambient temperature
/ Animal behavior
/ Animal reproduction
/ Aquatic ecosystems
/ Aquatic insects
/ Body size
/ Case studies
/ Climate change
/ Emergence
/ Environmental changes
/ Insects
/ Interspecific
/ Laboratories
/ Length
/ Males
/ Mesocosms
/ Polypedilum sordens
/ Ponds
/ Precipitation
/ Regression analysis
/ Sensitivity
/ Species
/ Success
/ Temperature
/ Wings
2021
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Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
Journal Article
Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
2021
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Overview
Chironomids are a useful group for investigating body size responses to warming due to their high local abundance and sensitivity to environmental change. We collected specimens of six species of chironomids every 2 weeks over a 2-year period (2017–2018) from mesocosm experiments using five ponds at ambient temperature and five ponds at 4°C higher than ambient temperature. We investigated (1) wing length responses to temperature within species and between sexes using a regression analysis, (2) interspecific body size responses to test whether the body size of species influences sensitivity to warming, and (3) the correlation between emergence date and wing length. We found a significantly shorter wing length with increasing temperature in both sexes of Procladius crassinervis and Tanytarsus nemorosus, in males of Polypedilum sordens, but no significant relationship in the other three species studied. The average body size of a species affects the magnitude of the temperature-size responses in both sexes, with larger species shrinking disproportionately more with increasing temperature. There was a significant decline in wing length with emergence date across most species studied (excluding Polypedilum nubeculosum and P. sordens), indicating that individuals emerging later in the season tend to be smaller.
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