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1.
J Therm Biol ; 122: 103880, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38850621

RESUMEN

Winter climate is changing rapidly in northern latitudes, and these temperature events have effects on salmonid thermal biology. Stressors during winter egg incubation could reduce hatching success and physiological performance of fall-spawning fishes. Here we quantified the potential for ontogenic carryover effects from embryonic thermal stress in multiple wild and hatchery-origin populations of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), a temperate ectotherm native to northeastern North America. Fertilized eggs from four populations were incubated over the winter in the laboratory in four differing thermal regimes: ambient stream-fed water, chronic warming (+2 °C), ambient with a mid-winter cold-shock, and short-term warming late during embryogenesis (to stimulate an early spring). We examined body size and upper thermal tolerance at the embryonic, fry (10 weeks post-hatch and 27-30 weeks post-hatch) and gravid adult (age 2+) life stages (overall N = 1482). In a separate experiment, we exposed developing embryos to acute seven-day heat stress events immediately following fertilization and at the eyed-egg stage, and then assessed upper thermal tolerance (CTmax) 37 weeks post-hatch. In all cases, fish were raised in common garden conditions after hatch (i.e., same temperatures). Our thermal treatments during incubation had effects that varied by life stage, with incubation temperature and life stage both affecting body size and thermal tolerance. Embryos incubated in warmer treatment groups had higher thermal tolerance; there was no effect of the mid-winter melt event on embryo CTmax. Ten weeks after hatch, fry from the ambient and cold-shock treatment groups had higher and less variable thermal tolerance than did the warmer treatment groups. At 27-30 post-hatch and beyond, differences in thermal tolerance among treatment groups were negligible. Collectively, our study suggests that brook trout only exhibit short-term carryover effects from thermal stressors during embryo incubation, with no lasting effects on phenotype beyond the first few months after hatch.


Asunto(s)
Embrión no Mamífero , Trucha , Animales , Trucha/fisiología , Trucha/crecimiento & desarrollo , Trucha/embriología , Embrión no Mamífero/fisiología , Respuesta al Choque Térmico , Termotolerancia , Femenino , Desarrollo Embrionario , Tamaño Corporal
2.
J Therm Biol ; 112: 103482, 2023 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36796924

RESUMEN

Critical thermal maximum (CTmax) is widely used for measuring thermal tolerance but the strong effect of acclimation on CTmax is a likely source of variation within and among studies/species that makes comparisons more difficult. There have been surprisingly few studies focused on quantifying how quickly acclimation occurs or that combine temperature and duration effects. We studied the effects of absolute temperature difference and duration of acclimation on CTmax of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), a well-studied species in the thermal biology literature, under laboratory conditions to determine how each of the two factors and their combined effects influence critical thermal maximum. Using an ecologically-relevant range of temperatures and testing CTmax multiple times between one and 30 days, we found that both temperature and duration of acclimation had strong effects on CTmax. As predicted, fish that were exposed to warmer temperatures longer had increased CTmax, but full acclimation (i.e., a plateau in CTmax) did not occur by day 30. Therefore, our study provides useful context for thermal biologists by demonstrating that the CTmax of fish can continue to acclimate to a new temperature for at least 30 days. We recommend that this be considered in future studies measuring thermal tolerance that intend to have their organisms fully acclimated to a given temperature. Our results also support using detailed thermal acclimation information to reduce uncertainty caused by local or seasonal acclimation effects and to improve the use of CTmax data for fundamental research and conservation planning.


Asunto(s)
Aclimatación , Peces , Animales , Temperatura
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