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Lifelong Effects of Thermal Challenges During Development in Birds and Mammals

Nord, Andreas LU and Giroud, Sylvain (2020) In Frontiers in Physiology 11.
Abstract
Before they develop competent endothermy, mammals and birds are sensitive to fluctuating temperature. It follows that early life thermal environment can trigger changes to the ontogeny of thermoregulatory control. At the ecological level, we have incomplete knowledge of how such responses affect temperature tolerance later in life. In some cases, changes to pre- and postnatal temperature prime an organism’s capacity to meet a corresponding thermal environment in adulthood. However, in other cases, developmental temperature seems to constrain temperature tolerance later in life. The timing, duration, and severity of a thermal challenge will determine whether its impact is ameliorating or constraining. However, the effects influencing the... (More)
Before they develop competent endothermy, mammals and birds are sensitive to fluctuating temperature. It follows that early life thermal environment can trigger changes to the ontogeny of thermoregulatory control. At the ecological level, we have incomplete knowledge of how such responses affect temperature tolerance later in life. In some cases, changes to pre- and postnatal temperature prime an organism’s capacity to meet a corresponding thermal environment in adulthood. However, in other cases, developmental temperature seems to constrain temperature tolerance later in life. The timing, duration, and severity of a thermal challenge will determine whether its impact is ameliorating or constraining. However, the effects influencing the transition between these states remain poorly understood, particularly in mammals and during the postnatal period. As climate change is predicted to bring more frequent spells of extreme temperature, it is relevant to ask under which circumstances developmental thermal conditions predispose or constrain animals’ capacity to deal with temperature variation. Increasingly stochastic weather also implies increasingly decoupled early- and late-life thermal environments. Hence, there is a pressing need to understand better how developmental temperature impacts thermoregulatory responses to matched and mismatched thermal challenges in subsequent life stages. Here, we summarize studies on how the thermal environment before, and shortly after, birth affects the ontogeny of thermoregulation in birds and mammals, and outline how this might carry over to temperature tolerance in adulthood. We also identify key points that need addressing to understand how effects of temperature variation during development may facilitate or constrain thermal adaptation over a lifetime. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
thermoregulation, mammal, bird, climate change, body temperature, global warming, heat wave, thermal acclimation
in
Frontiers in Physiology
volume
11
article number
419
pages
9 pages
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85086092689
  • pmid:32523540
ISSN
1664-042X
DOI
10.3389/fphys.2020.00419
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b96b625b-01a2-495f-9066-ad1d45bc29ec
date added to LUP
2020-05-25 07:30:16
date last changed
2024-05-16 10:01:28
@article{b96b625b-01a2-495f-9066-ad1d45bc29ec,
  abstract     = {{Before they develop competent endothermy, mammals and birds are sensitive to fluctuating temperature. It follows that early life thermal environment can trigger changes to the ontogeny of thermoregulatory control. At the ecological level, we have incomplete knowledge of how such responses affect temperature tolerance later in life. In some cases, changes to pre- and postnatal temperature prime an organism’s capacity to meet a corresponding thermal environment in adulthood. However, in other cases, developmental temperature seems to constrain temperature tolerance later in life. The timing, duration, and severity of a thermal challenge will determine whether its impact is ameliorating or constraining. However, the effects influencing the transition between these states remain poorly understood, particularly in mammals and during the postnatal period. As climate change is predicted to bring more frequent spells of extreme temperature, it is relevant to ask under which circumstances developmental thermal conditions predispose or constrain animals’ capacity to deal with temperature variation. Increasingly stochastic weather also implies increasingly decoupled early- and late-life thermal environments. Hence, there is a pressing need to understand better how developmental temperature impacts thermoregulatory responses to matched and mismatched thermal challenges in subsequent life stages. Here, we summarize studies on how the thermal environment before, and shortly after, birth affects the ontogeny of thermoregulation in birds and mammals, and outline how this might carry over to temperature tolerance in adulthood. We also identify key points that need addressing to understand how effects of temperature variation during development may facilitate or constrain thermal adaptation over a lifetime.}},
  author       = {{Nord, Andreas and Giroud, Sylvain}},
  issn         = {{1664-042X}},
  keywords     = {{thermoregulation; mammal; bird; climate change; body temperature; global warming; heat wave; thermal acclimation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Physiology}},
  title        = {{Lifelong Effects of Thermal Challenges During Development in Birds and Mammals}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/79923509/Nord_Giroud_FPhys_2020.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fphys.2020.00419}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}