Scientists from Simon Fraser University in Canada and University of Tasmania in Australia have found that sea and land cold-blooded animals differ in their responses to climate warming.

Researchers have found that land cold-blooded species - such as this lizard Potamites montanicola from southern Peru - live farther from the equator than their internal thermometers suggest they can live (Germán Chávez / Diego Vasquez)
Their study, published in Nature Climate Change, also provides insights into why and how species are moving around the globe in response to global warming.
The team gathered published data from tests determining the physiological temperature limits – tolerance to heating and cooling levels – on 169 cold-blooded marine and terrestrial species, then compared the data with the regions the species inhabit.
They found that while marine animals closely conformed to the temperature regions they could potentially occupy, terrestrial species live farther from the equator than their internal thermometers suggest they can live. In other words warm temperatures aren’t limiting them from living in closer to the equator.
“Finding that marine and terrestrial species are limited by their cold tolerance suggest that warming will allow expansions of animals towards the poles to take advantage of newly opened up habitats,” said Dr Jennifer Sunday, a biologist at Simon Fraser University in Canada and lead author of the study.
“However because land animals are not limited by heat to the same extent as marine animals, patterns of retreat in the hottest regions of species’ ranges may differ between land and sea,” she added.
The team found that while both the cold and warm boundaries of marine species are marching towards the poles, terrestrial species have been less responsive at their warm versus their cold range boundaries.
“We think a combination of things is going on,” said Dr Amanda Bates, a co-author from the University of Tasmania’s Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies. “A species niche isn’t just set by temperature. On land where water is key, species may be hindered more by dryness rather than being too hot at this range boundary.
“Second, it could be that rare heat waves are actually setting boundaries on where species can live. Finally, as Charles Darwin pointed out over 150 years ago, there may be more species and much more ecological competition toward the tropics, which may be enough to exclude species from living in the warmer end of their potential real estate.”
The authors call for research to better understand how climate change will affect animals, especially those on land where predicting responses to warming may be particularly difficult.
“Terrestrial species ranges may stretch towards the poles – expanding their cold range boundaries but responding erratically at their warm boundaries,” explained Dr Nicholas Dulvy, a marine biologist at Simon Fraser University. “These individuals will be overrun by the ‘pole-wards’ march as other species enter their territories. So we will see all sorts of new ecology as species come into contact and interact as never before.”