Effects of summer frost exposures on the cold tolerance strategy of a sub-Antarctic beetle

被引:65
作者
Bale, JS [1 ]
Worland, MR
Block, W
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Sch Biosci, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
[2] British Antarctic Survey, NERC, Cambridge CB3 0ET, England
关键词
Hydromedion sparsutum; repeated freezing; freeze tolerance; freeze avoidance; dual strategy; sub-antarctic;
D O I
10.1016/S0022-1910(01)00097-X
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
The sub-Antarctic beetle Hydromedion sparsutum (Coleoptera, Perimylopidae) is common locally on the island of South Georgia where sub-zero temperatures can be experienced in any month of the year. Larvae were known to be weakly freeze tolerant in summer with a mean supercooling point (SCP) around -4 degreesC and a lower lethal temperature of -10 degreesC (15 min exposure). This study investigated the effects of successive freezing exposures on the SCP and subsequent survival of summer acclimatised larvae. The mean SCP of field fresh larvae was -4.2 +/- 0.2 degreesC with a range from -1.0 to -6.1 degreesC. When larvae were cooled to -6.5 degreesC on 10 occasions at intervals of 30 min and one and four days, survival was 44, 70 and 68%, respectively. The 'end of experiment' SCP of larvae surviving 10 exposures at -6.5 degreesC showed distinct changes and patterns from the original field population depending on the interval between exposure. In the 30 min interval group, most larvae froze between -6 and -8 degreesC, a depression of up to 6 degreesC from the original sample; all larvae were dead when cooling was continued below the SCP to -12 degreesC. In the one and four day interval groups, most larvae froze above -6 degreesC, showing no change as a result of the 10 exposures at -6.5 degreesC. As with the 30 min interval group, some larvae froze below -6 degreesC, but with a wider range, and again, all were dead when cooled to -12 degreesC. However, in the one and four day interval groups, some larvae remained unfrozen when cooled to -12 degreesC, a depression of their individual SCP of at least 6 degreesC, and were alive 24 h after cooling. In a further experiment, larvae were cooled to their individual SCP temperature at daily intervals on 10 occasions to ensure that every larva froze every day. Most larvae which showed a depression of their SCP of 2-4 degreesC from their day one value became moribund or died after six or seven freezing events. Survival was highest in larvae with SCPs of -2 to -3 degreesC on day one and which froze at this level on all 10 occasions. The results indicate that in larvae in which the SCP is lowered following sub-zero exposure, the depression of the SCP is greatest in individuals that do not actually freeze. Further, the data suggest that after successive frost exposures in early winter the larval population may become segregated into two sub-populations with different overwintering strategies. One group consists of larvae that freeze consistently in the temperature range from -1 to -3 degreesC and can survive multiple freeze-thaw cycles. A second group with lower initial SCPs (around -6 degreesC), or which fall to this level or lower (down to -12 degreesC) after freezing on one or more occasions, are less likely to freeze through extended supercooling, but more likely to die if freezing occurs. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1161 / 1167
页数:7
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