Resistance to thermal stress in adult Drosophila buzzatii: acclimation and variation among populations

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Abstract

Survival after heat stress was examined in adult Drosophila buzzatii from seven localities. Males and females were conditioned by a non-lethal high temperature before exposure to a severe thermal stress. Variable times elapsed between conditioning, either as adults or pupae, and exposure to the stress were used, and experimental times to the stress ranged from 2 to 96 hours. Survival after stress varied among populations, and differences generally were consistent across conditioning treatments and across experiments. Resistance to thermal stress was much higher following one conditioning bout 2-4 hours before exposure to a severe stress than when the time elapsed between conditioning and exposure was increased to 24 or more hours. Significantly more adults survived the stress if conditioned 4 days before exposure to the thermal stress, either as adults or as pupae, than if not conditioned. The rank order of resistance roughly followed that predicted from the climatic conditions of the localities of origin. © 1995.

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Krebs, R. A., & Loeschcke, V. (1995). Resistance to thermal stress in adult Drosophila buzzatii: acclimation and variation among populations. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. https://doi.org/10.1016/0024-4066(95)90001-2

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