Data from: The cold-water connection: Bergmann's rule in North American freshwater fishes

Understanding general rules governing macroecological body size variations is one of the oldest pursuits in ecology. However, this science has been dominated by studies of terrestrial vertebrates, spurring debate over the validity of such rules in other taxonomic groups. Here, relationships between...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rypel, Andrew Lee
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) 2019
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.50720
Description
Summary:Understanding general rules governing macroecological body size variations is one of the oldest pursuits in ecology. However, this science has been dominated by studies of terrestrial vertebrates, spurring debate over the validity of such rules in other taxonomic groups. Here, relationships between maximum body size and latitude, temperature and elevation were evaluated for 29 North American freshwater fish species. Bergmann's rule was observed in 38% of species, converse Bergmann's rule was observed in 34% of species, and 28% of species showed no macroecological body size relationships. Most notably, every species that expressed Bergmann's rule was a cool or coldwater species while every species that expressed converse Bergmann's rule was a warmwater species, highlighting how these patterns are likely connected to species thermal niches. This study contradicts previous research suggesting Bergmann's rule does not apply to freshwater fishes, and is congruent with an emerging paradigm of variable macroecological body size patterns in poikilotherms. Supplementary Dataset 1Maximum body size records for studied North American freshwater fishes. Each record represents a US State angling record for the species. A latitude and longitude centroid for each ecosystem of catch was determined a priori using Google Earth software. Latitude-longitude data were subsequently uploaded into the climate interpolation program NewLocClim to generate site specific information on elevation, mean annual air temperature and growing degree days>10 degrees C. A total of 16 records was considered the prerequisite number for inclusion in the published analysis. A larger database including species with <16 observations can be obtained from the author.Supplementary Table 1 - Uploaded.xls