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Special Issue
Predicting the Future: Species Survival in a Changing World
Guest Editors: Craig E. Franklin, Hans H. Hoppeler
February, 2021; 224 (Suppl 1)

INSIDE JEB

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    Making a difference: the role of comparative biology in tackling climate change
    Kathryn Knight
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb242381 doi: 10.1242/jeb.242381 Published 24 February 2021

EDITORIAL

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    Elucidating mechanism is important in forecasting the impact of a changing world on species survival
    Craig E. Franklin, Hans H. Hoppeler
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb242284 doi: 10.1242/jeb.242284 Published 24 February 2021

REVIEWS

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    Climate impacts on organisms, ecosystems and human societies: integrating OCLTT into a wider context
    Hans-O. Pörtner
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb238360 doi: 10.1242/jeb.238360 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: This Review takes a broad view how OCLTT can be looked at as an evolutionary principle that allows a deeper understanding of connectivity and the impacts of climate change in biological systems.

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    Physiological adaptation to cities as a proxy to forecast global-scale responses to climate change
    Sarah E. Diamond, Ryan A. Martin
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb229336 doi: 10.1242/jeb.229336 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: We provide a quantitative synthesis of the use of cities as warming experiments and space-for-time substitutions to explore plasticity and evolution of thermal physiological traits under global change.

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    Towards more integration of physiology, dispersal and land-use change to understand the responses of species to climate change
    Christian Hof
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb238352 doi: 10.1242/jeb.238352 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: To better understand and predict responses of species and biodiversity in a world of global change, we need more integration across disciplines, of data and methods, and across scales.

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    Shifts in the relative fitness contributions of fecundity and survival in variable and changing environments
    Lauren B. Buckley, Sean D. Schoville, Caroline M. Williams
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb228031 doi: 10.1242/jeb.228031 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: We explore how detecting and predicting shifts in survival and fecundity fitness constraints can improve our ability to forecast responses to climate gradients and change.

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    Predicting the effects of climate change on incubation in reptiles: methodological advances and new directions
    A. L. Carter, Fredric J. Janzen
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb236018 doi: 10.1242/jeb.236018 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: As models of embryonic development are translated from the laboratory to natural nests and scaled up to populations, fine-scale temperature data are increasingly important yet remain an often-overlooked component of our understanding of thermal developmental plasticity in reptiles.

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    Diving in hot water: a meta-analytic review of how diving vertebrate ectotherms will fare in a warmer world
    Essie M. Rodgers, Craig E. Franklin, Daniel W. A. Noble
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb228213 doi: 10.1242/jeb.228213 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Using meta-analytic approaches, we show that diving ectothermic vertebrates are particularly vulnerable to climate warming. On average, dive durations decreased by 11% with every 1°C increase in water temperature.

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    How dryland mammals will respond to climate change: the effects of body size, heat load and a lack of food and water
    Andrea Fuller, Duncan Mitchell, Shane K. Maloney, Robyn S. Hetem, Vinicius F. C. Fonsêca, Leith C. R. Meyer, Tanja M. F. N. van de Ven, Edward P. Snelling
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb238113 doi: 10.1242/jeb.238113 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Dryland mammals facing climate change are encountering increasing heat as well as reduced water and food availability. We discuss these compound effects on performance in mammals of varying body size.

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    Physiological consequences of Arctic sea ice loss on large marine carnivores: unique responses by polar bears and narwhals
    Anthony M. Pagano, Terrie M. Williams
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb228049 doi: 10.1242/jeb.228049 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Two Arctic marine mammal specialists, polar bears (Ursus maritimus) and narwhals (Monodon monoceros), are physiologically limited in their ability to respond to a rapidly warming Arctic.

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    Thermoregulation in desert birds: scaling and phylogenetic variation in heat tolerance and evaporative cooling
    Andrew E. McKechnie, Alexander R. Gerson, Blair O. Wolf
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb229211 doi: 10.1242/jeb.229211 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Many physiological variables related to avian heat tolerance vary significantly with body mass, but also vary substantially among taxa that differ in their reliance on panting, gular flutter or cutaneous evaporation for evaporative heat dissipation.

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    Dealing with predictable and unpredictable temperatures in a climate change context: the case of parasitoids and their hosts
    Cécile Le Lann, Joan van Baaren, Bertanne Visser
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb238626 doi: 10.1242/jeb.238626 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Plasticity and bet-hedging may be adaptive strategies of hosts and parasitoids to cope with the continuum of predictable and unpredictable fluctuating temperatures in a changing climate context.

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    The role of mechanistic physiology in investigating impacts of global warming on fishes
    Sjannie Lefevre, Tobias Wang, David J. McKenzie
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb238840 doi: 10.1242/jeb.238840 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Thermal performance curves are important for predicting warming effects on fish. A review of current data indicates that aerobic scope is not universally limited by warming, and alternative measures are suggested.

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    Bioenergetics in environmental adaptation and stress tolerance of aquatic ectotherms: linking physiology and ecology in a multi-stressor landscape
    Inna Sokolova
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb236802 doi: 10.1242/jeb.236802 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Quantification of organismal energy fluxes under different stress scenarios follows predictions of the ecological outcomes of stress exposures and understanding of the mechanisms of stressor interactions.

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    Avenues of reef-building coral acclimatization in response to rapid environmental change
    Hollie M. Putnam
    Journal of Experimental Biology 2021 224: jeb239319 doi: 10.1242/jeb.239319 Published 24 February 2021

    Summary: Reef-building corals are under threat from anthropogenic impacts. The partners of the coral holobiont and coral developmental process provide symbiotic, epigenetic and genetic mechanisms for acclimatization and adaptation to climate change.

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    Contextual behavioural plasticity in Italian agile frog (Rana latastei) tadpoles exposed to native and alien predator cues

    Andrea Gazzola, Alessandro Balestrieri, Giovanni Scribano, Andrea Fontana, Daniele Pellitteri-Rosa
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    Drosophila acquires seconds-scale rhythmic behavior

    Masayoshi Ikarashi, Hiromu Tanimoto
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    Drosophila larval epidermal cells only exhibit epidermal aging when they persist to the adult stage

    Yan Wang, Sirisha Burra, Michael J. Galko
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    Monoterpenoid signals and their transcriptional responses to feeding and juvenile hormone regulations in bark beetle Ips hauseri Reitter

    Jia Xing Fang, Hui Cong Du, Xia Shi, Su Fang Zhang, Fu Liu, Zhen Zhang, Peng Juan Zu, Xiang Bo Kong
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    Beyond the Kármán gait: knifefish swimming in periodic and irregular vortex streets

    Victor M. Ortega-Jimenez, Christopher P. Sanford
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