How hot is too hot? Thermal tolerance, performance, and preference in juvenile mangrove whiprays, Urogymnus granulatus.

J Therm Biol

Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia; College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mangrove habitats act as nurseries for sharks and rays, but the specific adaptations of these species to cope with thermal extremes in these environments remain underexplored.
  • The study focused on juvenile mangrove whiprays, identifying their critical thermal limits, oxygen uptake rates under varying temperatures, and monitoring their body temperatures in relation to environmental temperatures, finding the rays prefer cooler waters even during hot conditions.
  • The findings suggest that these young rays utilize behavioral strategies to manage temperature changes, indicating that mangrove areas are crucial for their survival, though they face threats from habitat loss and climate change.

Article Abstract

Mangrove habitats can serve as nursery areas for sharks and rays. Such environments can be thermally dynamic and extreme; yet, the physiological and behavioural mechanisms sharks and rays use to exploit such habitats are understudied. This study aimed to define the thermal niche of juvenile mangrove whiprays, Urogymnus granulatus. First, temperature tolerance limits were determined via the critical thermal maximum (CT) and minimum (CT) of mangrove whiprays at summer acclimation temperatures (28 °C), which were 17.5 °C and 39.9 °C, respectively. Then, maximum and routine oxygen uptake rates (ṀO and ṀO, respectively), post-exercise oxygen debt, and recovery were estimated at current (28 °C) and heatwave (32 °C) temperatures, revealing moderate temperature sensitivities (i.e., Q) of 2.4 (ṀO) and 1.6 (ṀO), but opposing effects on post-exercise oxygen uptake. Finally, body temperatures (T) of mangrove whiprays were recorded using external temperature loggers, and environmental temperatures (T) were recorded using stationary temperature loggers moored in three habitat zones (mangrove, reef flat, and reef crest). As expected, environmental temperatures varied between sites depending on depth. Individual mangrove whiprays presented significantly lower T relative to T during the hottest times of the day. Electivity analysis showed tagged individuals selected temperatures from 24.0 to 37.0 °C in habitats that ranged from 21.1 to 43.5 °C. These data demonstrate that mangrove whiprays employ thermotaxic behaviours and a thermally insensitive aerobic metabolism to thrive in thermally dynamic and extreme habitats. Tropical nursery areas may, therefore, offer important thermal refugia for young rays. However, these tropical nursery areas could become threatened by mangrove and coral habitat loss, and climate change.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.103943DOI Listing

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  • The findings suggest that these young rays utilize behavioral strategies to manage temperature changes, indicating that mangrove areas are crucial for their survival, though they face threats from habitat loss and climate change.
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