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Seasonal Changes in the Critical Thermal Maxima of Four Species of Aquatic Insects (Ephemeroptera, Trichoptera)
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Seasonal Changes in the Critical Thermal Maxima of Four Species of Aquatic Insects (Ephemeroptera, Trichoptera)

David C Houghton and Logan Shoup
Environmental entomology, Vol.43(4), pp.1059-1066
01/08/2014
PMID: 25182620

Abstract

Entomology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
Seasonal changes in the critical thermal maxima (CTmax) of four species of aquatic insects were determined from February 2012 to February 2013 from a first-order stream in northern Lower Michigan. Three of these species: Stenonema femoratum (Ephemeroptera: Heptageniidae), Hydropsyche slossonae (Trichoptera: Hydropsychidae), and Dolophilodes distinctus (Trichoptera: Philopotamidae) exhibited seasonal changes in CTmax, increasing through the spring and summer and then decreasing into the subsequent fall and winter. CTmax of these species correlated strongly with both the seasonal ambient stream temperature and with a series of different laboratory acclimation temperatures, suggesting that organisms adapt to laboratory acclimation in a similar manner as they adapt to seasonal changes. In contrast, the CTmax of Parapsyche apicalis (Trichoptera: Arctopsychidae) remained constant regardless of ambient or acclimation temperature. All species exhibited greater thermal sensitivity relative to ambient temperature during the summer than the winter. Our study indicates that thermal tolerance patterns can be different among species in the same environment. It also provides the first winter and year-round thermal tolerance data for aquatic insects.

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