This repository contains code and data needed to reproduce the article:
Cheng C. T., Chuang M. F., Haramura, T., Cheng C. B., Kim Y. I., Borzée A., Wu C. S., Chen Y. H., Jang Y., Wu N. C., & Kam, Y. C. (2023) Open habitats increase vulnerability of amphibian tadpoles to climate warming across latitude. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 31, 83-94. DOI:
When using the data or code from this project, please cite it as:
Cheng C. T., Chuang M. F., Haramura, T., Cheng C. B., Kim Y. I., Borzée A., Wu C. S., Chen Y. H., Jang Y., Wu N. C., & Kam, Y. C. (2022) nicholaswunz/tadpole-thermal-tolerance: Accepted version of paper data and code of manuscript: Open habitats increase vulnerability of amphibian tadpoles to climate warming across latitude (Global Ecology and Biogeography). Zenodo. DOI:
Raw data
raw_data.csv
- Raw data used for the analysis.tree2021_12.nwk
- Phylogeny of all 29 Anuran species used in the study.
Analysis workflow
supplementary_information.html
- Supplementary information which contains the R workflow for processing and analysing the raw data, and creating figures.
Extra files
accession_number.csv
- Accession number of genes of all species (ingroups and outgroups) in the analysis from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI).parameters.csv
- Parameter values used to estimate pond temperature using NicheMapR.
Aim: Global warming and deforestation are pushing species closer to their physiological limit, especially for species with habitat-restricted life stages because sunlit areas have higher maximal temperatures. Here, we examined the upper critical thermal limit (CTmax), and maximum environmental water temperature (Tmax) of larvae from 29 anuran species across a latitudinal gradient (22–43° N) to test how latitude and habitat type (open or closed-forest ponds) affected warming tolerance, an index of vulnerability to climate change.
Location: Taiwan, Korea, Japan.
Time period: Present.
Major taxa studied: Anurans.
Results: We showed that open ponds lowered warming tolerance, regardless of latitude and phylogenetic clustering, contrasting the established literature that warming tolerance is lower at tropical latitudes, which only applied to species in forest ponds in this study. Importantly, biophysical models at the local scale suggest that increasing deforestation will exacerbate the effects of climate warming on warming tolerance.
Main conclusions: Local effects of accelerated warming and habitat modification means that species with range-restricted life stages will be subjected to increased vulnerability to anthropogenic change.
Keywords: amphibian decline, critical thermal maximum, latitudinal variation, macrophysiology, microhabitat, thermal tolerance, warming tolerance
This repository is provided by the authors under the MIT License (MIT).