January 31, 2019

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Climate change and infertility – a ticking time bomb?

Examples of organisms that may be particularly at risk of losing fertility due to high temperatures. Credit: Joaquim Alves Gaspar, Charles Sharp, Toby Hudson, and David Glass, CC BY 2.0
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Examples of organisms that may be particularly at risk of losing fertility due to high temperatures. Credit: Joaquim Alves Gaspar, Charles Sharp, Toby Hudson, and David Glass, CC BY 2.0

Rising temperatures could make some species sterile and see them succumb to the effects of climate change earlier than currently thought, scientists at the University of Liverpool warn.

"There is a risk that we are underestimating the on because we have focused on the temperatures that are lethal to organisms, rather than the temperatures at which organisms can no longer breed," explains Dr. Tom Price from the University's Institute of Integrative Biology.

Currently, biologists and conservationists are trying to predict where species will be lost due to , so they can build suitable reserves in the locations they will eventually need to move to. However, most of the data on when temperature will prevent species surviving in an area is based on the 'critical thermal limit' or CTL – the temperature at which they collapse, stop moving or die.

In a new opinion article published in Trends in Ecology and Evolution, the researchers highlight that extensive data from a wide variety of plants and animals suggests that organisms lose fertility at lower temperatures than their CTL.

Certain groups are thought to be most vulnerable to climate-induced fertility loss, including cold-blooded animals and . "Currently the information we have suggests this will be a serious issue for many organisms. But which ones are most at risk? Are fertility losses going to be enough to wipe out populations, or can just a few fertile individuals keep populations going? At the moment, we just don't know. We need more data," says Dr. Price.

To help address this, the researchers propose another measure of how organisms function at that focuses on fertility, which they have called the Thermal Fertility Limit or 'TFL'.

"We think that if biologists study TFLs as well as CTLs then we will be able to work out whether fertility losses due to climate change are something to worry about, which organisms are particularly vulnerable to these thermal fertility losses, and how to design conservation programmes that will allow species to survive our changing climate.

"We need researchers across the world, working in very different systems, from fish, to coral, to flowers, to mammals and flies, to find a way to measure how temperature impacts fertility in that organism, and compare it to estimates of the temperature at which they die or stop functioning," urges Dr. Price.

More information: Benjamin S. Walsh et al. The Impact of Climate Change on Fertility, Trends in Ecology & Evolution (2019). DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2018.12.002

Journal information: Trends in Ecology and Evolution

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