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Warm periods in repeated cold stresses protect Drosophila against ionoregulatory collapse, chilling injury, and reproductive deficits
[article]
2020
bioRxiv
pre-print
In many insects, repeated cold stress, characterized by warm periods that interrupt cold periods, have been found to yield survival benefits over continuous cold stress, but at the cost of reproduction. During cold stress, chill susceptible insects like Drosophila melanogaster suffer from a loss of ion and water balance, and the current model of recovery from chilling posits that re-establishment of ion homeostasis begins upon return to a warm environment, but that it takes minutes to hours for
doi:10.1101/2020.02.04.934265
fatcat:7ghcbdq3jvchpblwkijjrjszoy