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Warmer environments harbor greater thermal trait diversity in moth assemblages

  • Ming Liu
  • , Tzu Man Hung
  • , Shipher Wu
  • , Mark Liu
  • , Guan Shuo Mai
  • , Yi Shin Jang
  • , Chien Chen Huang
  • , Chun Yung Hsu
  • , Chia Hsuan Wei
  • , Mao Ning Tuanmu
  • , Shih Fan Chan
  • , I. Ching Chen
  • , Sheng Feng Shen

研究成果: Article同行評審

摘要

Thermal trait diversity is critical for understanding species’ responses to climate change, yet its ecological drivers remain unclear. Using eco-evolutionary simulations and empirical data from 653 moth species across three Asian elevational gradients, we examine how temperature regimes shape thermal strategies in assemblages. Warmer environments support larger hypervolumes of moth assemblages, reflecting a broader array of coexisting thermal strategies. Contrary to the climatic variability hypothesis, which predicts generalized traits under stable climates, we find that warmer sites foster assemblage-level diversity even while individual species retain narrow thermal tolerance ranges. Short-term temperature fluctuations exert minimal influence, while seasonal variability promotes generalists but reduces overall hypervolume. These results demonstrate that mean temperature, not variability, is the dominant force structuring thermal trait diversity. By revealing how thermal strategies assemble under different climates, our study provides a mechanistic basis for predicting biodiversity responses to warming and emphasizes the conservation value of low-elevation ecosystems.

原文English
文章編號738
期刊Nature communications
17
發行號1
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 2026 12月

UN SDG

此研究成果有助於以下永續發展目標

  1. SDG 13 - 氣候行動
    SDG 13 氣候行動

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • 一般化學
  • 一般生物化學,遺傳學和分子生物學
  • 多學科
  • 一般物理與天文學

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