Data from: Temperature-dependent body size effects determine population responses to climate warming

Current understanding of animal population responses to rising temperatures is based on the assumption that biological rates such as metabolism, which governs fundamental ecological processes, scale independently with body size and temperature, despite empirical evidence for interactive effects. Her...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lindmark, Max, Huss, Magnus, Ohlberger, Jan, GĂ„rdmark, Anna
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6nb35
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Summary:Current understanding of animal population responses to rising temperatures is based on the assumption that biological rates such as metabolism, which governs fundamental ecological processes, scale independently with body size and temperature, despite empirical evidence for interactive effects. Here we investigate the consequences of interactive temperature- and size-scaling of vital rates for the dynamics of populations experiencing warming using a stage-structured consumer-resource model. We show that interactive scaling alters population and stage-specific responses to rising temperatures, such that warming can induce shifts in population regulation and stage-structure, influence community structure and govern population responses to mortality. Analyzing experimental data for 20 fish species, we found size-temperature interactions in intraspecific scaling of metabolic rate to be common. Given the evidence for size-temperature interactions and the ubiquity of size structure in animal populations, we argue that accounting for size-specific temperature effects is pivotal for understanding how warming affects animal populations and communities. Lindmark.et.al.2017.empirical_data_fishbaseData on oxygen consumption (proxy for metabolic rate) in relation to body mass and temperature, in teleost fish. Originally collated from Fishbase (http://www.fishbase.org/search.php), using selection criteria specified in the article.