Pairing lab and field studies to predict thermal performance of wild fish.

J Therm Biol

Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, USA.

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • In thermally variable ecosystems, ectothermic fish need to adapt to significant temperature fluctuations both daily and seasonally, which is important for their survival.
  • Researchers studied eurythermal arrow gobies and their thermal tolerance by comparing lab-acclimated fish to those acclimatized in the wild.
  • Findings revealed that fish acclimated in variable lab conditions exhibited similar thermal limits to those in the field, and rapid tolerance adjustments were observed even within short time frames like a tidal cycle.

Article Abstract

In thermally variable ecosystems, temperatures can change extensively on hourly and seasonal timescales requiring ectotherms to possess a broad thermal tolerance (critical thermal minima [CTmin] and maxima [CTmax]). However, whether fish acclimate in the laboratory similarly as they acclimatize in the field under comparable thermal variation is unclear. We used temperature data from a tidal salt marsh to design 21-day lab-acclimation treatments (static: 12, 17, 22, 27 °C; daily variation with mean 22 °C: i) range 17-27 °C, ii) range 17-27 °C with irregular extremes within 12-32 °C). We compared thermal limits in lab-acclimated and field-acclimatized eurythermal arrow goby (Clevelandia ios). Variable temperature-acclimated and acclimatized fish had similar CTmin and CTmax. Notably, arrow gobies showed rapid plasticity in their absolute thermal tolerance within one tidal cycle. The daily mean and max temperatures experienced were positively related to CTmax and CTmin, respectively. This study demonstrates that ecologically informed lab acclimation treatments can yield tolerance results that are applicable to wild fish.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103780DOI Listing

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