WASHINGTON(AP)
While global warming is expected to be strongest at the poles,
it may be an even greater threat to species living in the tropics,
scientists say.
Tropical species are accustomed to living in a small temperature
range and thus may be unable to cope with changes of even a few
degrees, according to an analysis in Tuesday's edition of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"There's a strong relationship between your physiology
and the climate you live in. In the tropics many species appear to
be living at or near their thermal optimum, a temperature that lets
them thrive. But once temperature gets above the thermal optimum,
fitness levels most likely decline quickly and there may not be
much they can do about it," Joshua J. Tewksbury said in a
statement.
The research was led by Tewksbury, an assistant professor of
biology at the University of Washington and Curtis A. Deutsch, an
assistant professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the
University of California, Los Angeles.
Concern over global warming has largely focused on arctic
species like the polar bear. But such animals may be accustomed to
living in a wide range of temperatures, while there tends to be
little change in the tropics, so there has been no need for species
there to adapt.
"The direct effects of climate change on the organisms we
studied appear to depend a lot more on the organisms'
flexibility than on the amount of warming predicted for where they
live," Tewksbury said. "The tropical species in our data
were mostly thermal specialists, meaning that their current climate
is nearly ideal and any temperature increases will spell trouble
for them."
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