Science

Cold-blooded animals struggle with daily temperature swings

Muser Press

Testing a long-held assumption

Scientists expected ectotherms to adjust physiology to daily temperature changes, stabilizing functions like metabolism and movement.

Meta-analysis across species

Researchers analyzed 26 studies covering metabolic, locomotor, cardiovascular, and enzyme activity in diverse ectotherms.

No consistent adjustment found

The study found no clear evidence that ectotherms reduce sensitivity to daily temperature variation.

Implications under climate change

Reptiles and fish showed higher sensitivity, suggesting greater risk as temperature variability increases and reliance shifts to behavior or long-term adaptation.

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