How temperature affects the body size of terrestrial tardigrades

Author:

Kaczmarek Łukasz1,Fontaneto Diego2,Nelson Diane R3,Budka Anna4,Łacka Agnieszka5,Bartylak Tomasz1,Rzymski Piotr6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Taxonomy and Ecology, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University , Poznań , Poland

2. Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Istituto di Ricerca Sulle Acque CNR-IRSA , Verbania Pallanza , Italy

3. Department of Biological Sciences, East Tennessee State University , Johnson City , Tennessee , USA

4. Department of Construction and Geoengineering, Poznań University of Life Sciences , Wojska Polskiego 28, 60-637 Poznań , Poland

5. Department of Mathematical and Statistical Methods, Poznan University of Life Sciences , Poznań , Poland

6. Department of Environmental Medicine, Poznan University of Medical Sciences , Poznań , Poland

Abstract

Abstract Many vertebrates, both homeo- and poikilothermic, show a significant relationship between body size and environmental temperature. Whether such an association may exist in microscopic invertebrates has been less explored. Therefore, we decided to analyse terrestrial Tardigrada from various habitats worldwide to examine whether these animals reveal any relationship pattern between body size and environmental temperature. Data on minimum, maximum, and mean body sizes were extracted from original descriptions or sometimes from later re-descriptions of the species. Minimum, maximum, and mean temperature data from the type localities of the species were retrieved from WorldClim 2. In general, accounting for geographic and phylogenetic confounding factors, the body size of terrestrial tardigrades decreased as the environmental temperature increased. The same tendency was observed for most of the genera when additional analyses were carried out separately for each genus. This is the first biogeographical analysis demonstrating that terrestrial tardigrades generally conform to the temperature–size rule.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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