Ants can handle climate change just fine – even in Cleveland

From CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY

Species appears to evolve quickly enough to endure city temperatures

Study shows acorn ants rapidly adjust, suggesting the insects may be able to cope with other sources of warming, including climate change

Acorn ants evolve quickly to adjust to living in heat-trapping cities. The capability that may prove essential to enduring other sources of rising temperatures, such as climate change. CREDIT Ryan Martin

CLEVELAND–The speed at which a tiny ant evolves to cope to its warming city environment suggests that some species may evolve quickly enough to survive, or even thrive, in the warmer temperatures found within cities, according to a new study by researchers at Case Western Reserve University.

Evolution is often thought of as a process that takes millennia, but urban acorn ants collected in Cleveland have taken no more than 100 years to adjust to their heat-trapping home of asphalt and concrete steeped with waste heat from cars and buildings–although their tolerance to cold was reduced.

The researchers’ findings are published online in the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.

“Ants are an indicator species, and by comparing the physiologies of urban versus rural ants, we can get an idea of whether ants and other cold-blooded animals will be able to cope with the temperature changes associated with urbanization and other sources of warming like global climate change,” said Sarah Diamond, assistant professor of biology at Case Western Reserve and the study’s lead author.

Diamond worked with Ryan Martin, assistant professor of biology, research associates Lacy Chick and Stephanie Strickler, and PhD student Abe Perez.

Cities tend to be a couple of degrees warmer than surrounding rural areas. To determine whether animals evolve or simply adjust to added warmth, the research team collected and compared acorn ants from the city and nearby rural land.

The acorn ant (Temnothorax curvispinosus) is widespread and important for decomposing organic material in urban and rural environments across the United States. This species of ant is smaller than a cookie crumb; an entire colony of 250 can fit in a single acorn.

The researchers collected colonies from within the city of Cleveland and as far as 28 miles east from the Holden Arboretum in suburban Kirtland, Ohio, to study in Diamond’s lab.

To isolate evolutionary change from short-term acclimation, groups of rural and city ants were raised in warmer city temperatures for about 10 weeks. Other groups from both locations were raised in cooler rural temperatures for 10 weeks.

Tests of thermal tolerance showed all the ants acclimated.

“They’re very plastic,” Martin said. “But ants collected from city habitats retained their higher heat tolerance and loss of cold tolerance compared to rural ants, regardless of whether they were born and reared under warm or cool temperatures.”

Martin and Diamond believe the Cleveland ants evolved as the city became and remained highly urban during the last 100 years. Because egg-laying queen ants live from five to 15 years, the evolution to heat tolerance likely took no more than 20 generations, the researchers estimated.

With temperatures predicted to rise at least a couple of degrees Celsius over the next century, “Global data suggests that the acclimation response won’t be enough to respond to climate change, but some species, like the acorn ants, may evolve quickly enough,” Diamond said.

The researchers suggest this experiment can be repeated with other species in cities around the world.

Whether other species can adapt as rapidly to cities and other sources of temperature change is unknown but remains an important question for researchers trying to predict what future biological communities will look like and how they will function, Diamond and Martin said.

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The Paper: https://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/article-abstract/doi/10.1093/biolinnean/blw047/3038290/Rapid-evolution-of-ant-thermal-tolerance-across-an?redirectedFrom=fulltext

Rapid evolution of ant thermal tolerance across an urban-rural temperature cline

Abstract

Rates of urbanization are accelerating worldwide. The increases in temperature associated with ‘urban heat island’ effects provide both an ecological imperative and a unique opportunity to explore the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that underlie organismal responses to rapid environmental change. We used the acorn ant, Temnothorax curvispinosus (Mayr 1866), to compare shifts in thermal tolerance of ants from rural and urban habitats throughout Cleveland, USA. Urban warming in the region has been ongoing for the past century which translates to 20 or fewer acorn ant generations. Using a common garden experiment, we found gains in the ability to withstand high temperatures and losses in the ability to withstand cool temperatures among ants in urban habitats. Owing to the greater magnitude of phenotypic change in lower compared with upper tolerances, tolerance breadth decreased in urban habitats. Mechanistically, these shifts in thermal tolerance under urbanization reflected both evolutionary change and phenotypic plasticity, as ants from urban areas exhibited higher thermal tolerances compared with ants from rural areas regardless of rearing temperature, and ants reared in the warmer temperature treatment exhibited higher tolerances than ants reared in the cooler temperature treatment. We also found evidence of evolved plasticity as the slope of the response to warmer and colder rearing environments differed significantly among rural and urban populations. While much of the ecological forecasting literature focuses on plastic responses to environmental change, our study provides evidence of rapid evolution of thermal tolerances, and suggests the importance of including evolutionary responses in forecasts of organismal responses to climatic change.
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nn
March 8, 2017 11:20 am

To paraphrase the late George Carlin:

The ants are fine. The prophets are phucked.

tty
March 8, 2017 12:44 pm

Two things to keep in mind:

Ten percent of all animal biomass on the planet is ants.

Insects are virtually immune to mass extinctions

fretslider
March 8, 2017 1:12 pm

With temperatures predicted to rise at least a couple of degrees Celsius over the next century, “Global data suggests that the acclimation response won’t be enough to respond to climate change

Predicted? Shurely shome mishtake.

Modelled.

Auto
Reply to  fretslider
March 8, 2017 3:31 pm

‘Projected’ seems to be the wriggle-word of choice nowadays.

Auto.
No Sarc there, mind.

March 8, 2017 3:44 pm

Anyone who has tried to eradicate ants in their yard knows that they are a tough lot and do not give up easily and go away. All Insects including ants and cockroaches in particular are immune to extinctions

u.k.(us)
March 8, 2017 5:57 pm

My ants can handle second hand smoke, also mixtures of melted sugar, honey and borax.
Chemical warfare just seems to get them drunk.
Might be time to nuke them 🙂

Mark Luhman
Reply to  u.k.(us)
March 8, 2017 8:49 pm

Nuke them won’t work, to many underground to begin with, they started to build bomb shelters millennial before we built the bomb, smart bastards their computer program must of have predicted it million of years before we developed and we were able to develop computers.

Mark Luhman
Reply to  Mark Luhman
March 8, 2017 8:50 pm

Do you think I can get a grant to study this?

KevinK
March 8, 2017 7:34 pm

“by comparing the physiologies of urban versus rural ants”

Wow, who knew there where urban and rural ants…..

Do the rural ants drive 4×4 pickups with knobby tires and gun racks, while the urban ants wear “dew rags”….

Do “urban ants” sport tattoos ???

Inquiring minds want to know (or probably not….)….

KevinK