Biological Invasions, volume 27, issue 1, publication number 5
Invasive adult jumping worms in Atlantic Canada are chill-susceptible
Victoria E. Adams
1
,
Subash Raj Chettiar
1
,
Tanner M. Clow
1
,
Emily Gendron
1
,
Amber L. Gough
1
,
Brianna E. M. Stewart
1
,
Erin Cameron
2
,
Jantina Toxopeus
1
2
Department of Environmental Sciences, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2024-11-28
Journal:
Biological Invasions
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 0.940
CiteScore: 6.0
Impact factor: 2.8
ISSN: 13873547, 15731464
Abstract
The jumping worm Amynthas tokioensis is invasive in North America, and has been expanding its range northward in recent years. Because low temperatures typically restrict the geographic poleward distribution of organisms, our goal was to characterize the cold tolerance physiology of adult jumping worms from a site in New Brunswick, Canada (c. 45°N), with the intent of better understanding their geographic range limits. Most of our experiments supported the conclusion that these worms are chill-susceptible: they die during or after exposure to relatively mild low temperatures. When gradually cooled, adult worms lost neuromuscular coordination at approximately 0 °C and froze at a mean temperature of − 4.5 °C. They did not survive freezing and showed poor survival following 1 h exposures to 0 °C and subzero temperatures. At higher mild temperatures (5 °C), the worms could survive short (up to 6 h) but not long (e.g., 48 h) chilling durations. We attempted to induce improved cold tolerance via a five-week gradual acclimation to fall-like temperatures, but fall-acclimated worms showed poor survival during and after this acclimation. Acclimation also did not induce accumulation of glucose, a typical cryoprotectant in earthworms. We suggest that A. tokioensis can likely persist wherever the growing season is sufficiently warm and long enough for the adults to mature, reproduce, and lay cocoons prior to the chilling temperatures associated with early fall. Future work examining the cold tolerance of the overwintering cocoons will be important for fully understanding the northern range limits of these jumping worms.
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