Cold-hardiness of the most common soil invertebrates in Northeast Asia. 1. Cold-hardiness and its mechanisms
- Authors: Berman D.I.1, Leirikh A.N.1
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Affiliations:
- Institute of Biological Problems of the North, Far Eastern Branch
- Issue: Vol 97, No 7 (2017)
- Pages: 996-1008
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/0013-8738/article/view/155322
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0013873817070144
- ID: 155322
Cite item
Abstract
Cold-hardiness of soil-dwelling invertebrates (37 species of insect and 27 species from other taxa) was studied in the continental parts of Northeast Asia, which represent a region with winter temperatures extreme for the Northern Hemisphere. Insects belonging to 34 species overwinter in the supercooled state, whereby they withstand temperatures of–12...–35°C. Thirteen species (insects, myriapods, slugs, earthworms, and an amphipod) spend winter in the frozen state and survive temperatures from–5 to–45°C. Cryoprotective dehydration is typical of slug eggs, earthworm cocoons, and certain click beetle larvae, which survive temperatures ranging from–20 to–40°C, down to the record value of–196°C. The majority of the studied organisms tolerate cooling to–25...–30°C, which corresponds to average temperature minima in the upper soil horizons of most biotopes in the continental parts of the Asian Northeast.
About the authors
D. I. Berman
Institute of Biological Problems of the North, Far Eastern Branch
Author for correspondence.
Email: aborigen@ibpn.ru
Russian Federation, Magadan, 685000
A. N. Leirikh
Institute of Biological Problems of the North, Far Eastern Branch
Email: aborigen@ibpn.ru
Russian Federation, Magadan, 685000
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