Investigating the impacts of climate change highlights a need to rapidly quantify an organism's thermal environment. We investigated the reliability of non-contact thermal imaging for measuring temperatures in an intertidal gastropod. Thermal maxima from images of either dorsal or ventral surfaces correlated strongly with invasive temperature-probe readings, producing highly significant regression models to predict mantle temperatures from thermal images. Thermal imaging was then fieldtested to non-invasively examine temperature changes of snails relative to their substrate: those exposed to sunlight had a mean temperature 4-8°C above the substrate during the day but 2-4°C below at night. Thermoregulation was also tested in the laboratory: when exposed to 45°C for 24 hours, snails reached 35-44°C, significantly higher than those (18°C to 25°C) held at 25°C. Thermal imaging is reliable for rapidly measuring tissue temperatures in a shelled gastropod typical of intertidal environments, thus providing a powerful tool for testing hypotheses about thermal responses in the changing global environment. © 2011 Malacological Society of Australasia & Society for the Study of Molluscan Diversity.
CITATION STYLE
Caddy-Retalic, S., Benkendorff, K., & Fairweather, P. G. (2011). Visualizing hotspots: Applying thermal imaging to monitor internal temperatures in intertidal gastropods. Molluscan Research, 31(2), 106–113. https://doi.org/10.11646/mr.31.2.5
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