Temperature-driven colour lightness and body size variation scale to
local assemblages of European Odonata but are modified by propensity for
dispersal
Abstract
1. Previous macrophysiological studies suggested that temperature-driven
colour lightness and body size variations strongly influence
biogeographical patterns in ectotherms, but whether these
trait-environment relationships scale to local assemblages and the
extent to which they can be modified by dispersal remains largely
unexplored. We test whether the predictions of the thermal melanism
hypothesis and the Bergmann’s rule hold for local assemblages. We also
assess whether these trait-environment relationships are more important
for species adapted to less stable (lentic) habitats, due to their
greater dispersal propensity compared to those adapted to stable (lotic)
habitats. 2. We quantified the colour lightness and body volume of 99
European dragon- and damselflies (Odonata) and combined these trait
information with survey data for 518 local assemblages across Europe.
Based on this continent-wide yet spatially explicit dataset, we tested
for effects temperature and precipitation on the colour lightness and
body volume of local assemblages and assessed differences in their
relative importance and strength between lentic and lotic assemblages,
while accounting for spatial and phylogenetic autocorrelation. 3. The
colour lightness of assemblages of odonates increased and body size
decreased with increasing temperature. Trait-environment relationships
in the average and phylogenetic predicted component were equally
important for assemblages of both habitat types but were stronger in
lentic assemblages when accounting for phylogenetic autocorrelation. 4.
Our results show that the mechanism underlying colour lightness and body
size variations scale to local assemblages, indicating their general
importance. These mechanisms were of equal evolutionary significance for
lentic and lotic species, but higher dispersal ability seems to enable
lentic species to cope better with historical climatic changes. The
documented differences between lentic and lotic assemblages also
highlight the importance of integrating interactions of thermal
adaptations with proxies of the dispersal ability of species into
trait-based models, for improving our understanding of climate-driven
biological responses.