Publications by authors named "Kerri L Ackerly"

Article Synopsis
  • Red drum fish can adapt to low oxygen environments by improving their aerobic performance, but the effects on their anaerobic metabolism and recovery after exercise are still unclear.
  • Juvenile red drum were acclimated to either normal or hypoxic conditions and tested at rest, after exercise, and after recovery, showing that hypoxia acclimated fish had different metabolic responses, particularly in muscle tissue.
  • The study found that hypoxia-acclimated fish exhibited higher pH levels and altered enzyme activity, suggesting they relied more on anaerobic metabolism during lower-intensity swimming compared to control fish, but did not show better recovery after exhaustive exercise.
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Article Synopsis
  • Respiratory plasticity in red drum fish allows them to adapt beneficially to chronic low oxygen levels encountered in their natural Gulf of Mexico habitat.
  • A study exposed red drum embryos to either low or normal oxygen levels for three days post-fertilization, revealing no immediate differences in survival or size.
  • After being reared in normoxic conditions, hypoxia-exposed fish showed improved aerobic capacity but also increased sensitivity to hypoxia, indicating a complex impact of early hypoxic exposure on their future swimming performance and metabolic efficiency.
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Recently, large-scale fish kills in the Pacific Northwest were linked to tire wear particles (TWPs) left on roadways, with the lethality attributed to 6PPD-quinone. which has a median lethal concentration of <1 µg/L for selected salmonids. However, there remains a paucity of 6PPD-quinone toxicity values developed for estuarine fish species, which is particularly significant because estuaries receiving inflows from highly urbanized watersheds are especially vulnerable to TWP contamination.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ocean warming poses a significant threat to marine ectotherms, and the "plastic floors, concrete ceilings" hypothesis suggests that fish can reduce their standard metabolic rate (SMR) in warmer temperatures to improve their aerobic scope (AS).
  • The study on red drum fish showed that while fish acclimated to 28°C had higher SMR and maximum metabolic rate (MMR) initially, SMR decreased significantly over 12 weeks, leading to no improvement in AS due to a drop in MMR.
  • Additionally, hypoxia vulnerability measures indicated that warming reduces the critical oxygen threshold (P) in acclimated fish, which could help them adapt to high-demand environments, thereby expanding the range of habitats
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There is an emerging call from scientists globally to advance the environmental relevance of laboratory studies, particularly within the field of ecotoxicology. To answer this call, we must carefully examine and elucidate the shortcomings of standardized toxicity testing methods that are used in the derivation of toxicity values and regulatory criteria. As a consequence of rapidly accelerating climate change, the inclusion of abiotic co-stressors are increasingly being incorporated into toxicity studies, with the goal of improving the representativeness of laboratory-derived toxicity values used in ecological risk assessments.

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Environmental hypoxia (low dissolved oxygen) is a significant threat facing fishes. As fishes require oxygen to efficiently produce ATP, hypoxia can significantly limit aerobic capacity. However, some fishes show respiratory flexibility that rescues aerobic performance, including plasticity in mitochondrial performance.

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With the growing prevalence of hypoxia (O2 levels ≤2 mg l-1) in aquatic and marine ecosystems, there is increasing interest in the adaptive mechanisms fish may employ to better their performance in stressful environments. Here, we investigated the contribution of a proposed strategy for enhancing tissue O2 extraction - plasma-accessible carbonic anhydrase (CA-IV) - under hypoxia in a species of estuarine fish (red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus) that thrives in fluctuating habitats. We predicted that hypoxia-acclimated fish would increase the prevalence of CA-IV in aerobically demanding tissues to confer more efficient tissue O2 extraction.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ocean deoxygenation due to climate change prompts fish to adapt by regulating hemoglobin (Hb) expression for better oxygen uptake.
  • Research focused on red drum fish showed significant up-regulation of a specific Hb subunit (hbα 2) within just 4 days of acclimation to low oxygen conditions.
  • The increased Hb expression and changes in oxygen binding led to higher metabolic rates and improved aerobic performance in hypoxic environments, highlighting how Hb diversity aids fish in respiratory efficiency under stress.
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Crude oil is known to induce developmental defects in teleost fish exposed during early-life stages (ELSs). A recent study has demonstrated that zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae acutely exposed to Deepwater Horizon (DHW) crude oil showed transcriptional changes in key genes involved in early kidney (pronephros) development and function, which were coupled with pronephric morphological defects. Given the osmoregulatory importance of the kidney, it is unknown whether ELS effects arising from short-term crude exposures result in long-term osmoregulatory defects, particularly within estuarine fishes likely exposed to DWH oil following the spill.

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Crude oil and the constituent polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) induce a consistent suite of sub-lethal effects in early life stage fishes. It has been suggested that 3-ring PAHs drive cardiotoxicity and that all other impacts are downstream consequences of these cardiac effects. However, recent studies have documented behavioral alterations that may not be linked to cardiotoxicity.

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The metabolic index concept combines metabolic data and known thermal sensitivities to estimate the factorial aerobic scope of animals in different habitats, which is valuable for understanding the metabolic demands that constrain species' geographical distributions. An important assumption of this concept is that the O2 supply capacity (which is equivalent to the rate of oxygen consumption divided by the environmental partial pressure of oxygen: ) is constant at O2 tensions above the critical O2 threshold (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Higher environmental temperatures during the spill increased fish metabolic demands, which compounded the negative effects of oil exposure on their oxygen transport and recovery from exercise.
  • * Red drum fish showed varying responses to oil and temperature; those acclimated to higher temperatures had decreased exercise recovery and oxygen thresholds, suggesting serious implications for their survival and fitness in a changing climate and ongoing oil exploration.
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Aerobic scope, the difference between standard metabolic requirements and maximum metabolic capacity, is considered a particularly important metric influencing ecological success in fishes. Crude oil exposure can impair cardiorespiratory function in fishes, which reduces maximum metabolic rate, aerobic scope, and may impair ecological performance. Oil exposure is not the only environmental stressor that can affect aerobic scope, especially in areas affected by crude oil spills.

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Crude oil and its constituent chemicals are common environmental toxicants in aquatic environments worldwide, and have been the subject of intense research for decades. Importantly, aquatic environments are also the sites of numerous other environmental disturbances that can impact the endemic fauna. While there have been a number of attempts to explore the potential additive and synergistic effects of oil exposure and environmental stressors, many of these efforts have focused on the cumulative effects on typical toxicological endpoints (e.

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Low dissolved oxygen (hypoxia) can severely limit fish performance, especially aerobically expensive behaviours including swimming and acquisition of sensory information. Fishes can reduce oxygen requirements by altering these behaviours under hypoxia, but the underlying mechanisms can be difficult to quantify. We used a weakly electric fish as a model system to explore potential effects of hypoxia on swim performance and sensory information acquisition, which enabled us to non-invasively record electric signalling activity used for active acquisition of sensory information during swimming.

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Many fishes perform quick and sudden swimming maneuvers known as fast-starts to escape when threatened. In pulse-type weakly electric fishes these responses are accompanied by transient increases in the rate of electric signal production known as novelty responses. While novelty responses may increase an individual's information about their surroundings, they are aerobically powered and may come at a high energetic cost when compared to fast-starts, which rely primarily on anaerobic muscle.

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Fishes are particularly sensitive to the effects of environmental conditions during early development, which can significantly impact adult morphology, performance, and survival. Previous research has highlighted the sensitivity of fishes to the effects of temperature during early development on vertebral number and muscle composition, which are both important determinants of an individual's swimming performance. In this study, we investigated the effect of developmental temperature on vertebral and muscle variation, and the subsequent effect of any variation on burst swimming performance in zebrafish (Danio rerio).

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Environmental conditions during early development in ectothermic vertebrates can lead to variation in vertebral number among individuals of the same species. It is often seen that individuals of a species raised at cooler temperatures have more vertebrae than individuals raised at warmer temperatures, although the functional consequences of this variation in vertebral number on swimming performance are relatively unclear. To investigate this relationship, we tested how vertebral number in axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum) affected performance of aquatic escape responses (C-starts).

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Mercury (Hg) is a widespread environmental contaminant known for the neurotoxicity of its methylated forms, especially monomethylmercury, which bioaccumulates and biomagnifies in aquatic food webs. Mercury bioaccumulation and biomagnification rates are known to vary among species utilizing different food webs (benthic vs limnetic) within and between systems. The authors assessed whether carbon and nitrogen stable isotope values and total Hg (THg) concentrations differed between sympatric benthic and limnetic ecotypes and sexes of threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus) from Benka Lake, Alaska, USA.

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