Wing Pigmentation Affects Thermal Response in Two Sexually Dimorphic
Calopteryx (Odonata)
Abstract
1. Organisms may internally or behaviourally regulate their body
temperatures or conform to the ambient air temperatures. Previous
studies are inconclusive on whether pigmentation influences
thermoregulation in various odonates. 2. We investigated the thermal
response of sympatric North American Calopteryx aequabilis and
Calopteryx maculata with a thermal imaging study across a 25 °C ambient
temperature range. 3. We found that regressions of thorax temperature on
ambient temperature had similar slopes for male and female C. maculata,
but females were consistently 1.5 °C warmer than males. 4. In contrast,
the sexes of C. aequabilis differed in slope, with C. aequabilis females
having a slope less than 1.0 and males having a slope greater than 1.0.
5. Given that C. aequabilis is strongly sexually dimorphic in pigment,
but C. maculata is not, our findings suggest that pigmentation does
influence thermal response rate in sympatric populations of both
species.