The seasonal response of metabolic rate to projected climate change scenarios in aquatic amphipods

IF 2.9 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOLOGY Journal of thermal biology Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jtherbio.2024.103941
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Abstract

The responses of organisms to climate change are mediated primarily by its impact on their metabolic rates, which, in turn, drive various biological and ecological processes. Although there have been numerous seminal studies on the sensitivity of metabolic rate to temperature, little is empirically known about how this rate responds to seasonal temperature ranges and beyond under conservative IPCC climate change scenarios. Here, we measured the SMR of the aquatic amphipod, Gammarus insensibilis, which served as our subject species, with body masses ranging from 0.20 to 7.74 mg ash free weight. We assessed the response of the SMR across nine temperature levels ranging from 12 to 30.2 °C. These temperatures match seasonal temperature norms, with an incremental increase of 0.6–1.2 °C above each seasonal baseline, as projected for the years 2040 and 2100 under the modest climate change scenarios. Overall, our findings showed that the effect of temperature on SMR varies with body mass, as indicated by a negative size-temperature interaction, with larger conspecifics exhibiting less sensitivity to temperature changes than smaller ones. From the cold to warm season, the SMR increased by an average of 14% °C−1, with increases of 18.4% °C−1 in smaller individuals and 11.4% °C−1 in larger ones. The SMR of smaller individuals peaked at a 0.6 °C increase from the current summer baseline (15.08% °C−1, Q10 = 4.2), while in larger ones it peaked with a 1.2 °C increase beyond autumn temperatures (14.9% °C−1, Q10 = 3.9). However, at temperatures reflecting global warming that exceed summer temperatures, the SMR of larger individuals levelled off, while that of smaller ones continued to increase. Overall, our findings suggest that smaller-sized individuals have a broader thermal window for SMR performance, while the SMR of larger-sized ones will become increasingly constrained at summer temperatures as those summer temperatures become hotter.

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水生片脚类动物代谢率对预测气候变化情景的季节性响应
生物对气候变化的反应主要取决于气候变化对其新陈代谢率的影响,而新陈代谢率又反过来推动各种生物和生态过程。尽管已有许多关于新陈代谢率对温度敏感性的开创性研究,但对于在保守的 IPCC 气候变化情景下,新陈代谢率如何对季节性温度范围及更大范围做出响应,却知之甚少。在这里,我们测量了水生片脚类动物(Gammarus insensibilis)的新陈代谢率(SMR)。我们在 12 至 30.2 °C 的九个温度水平上评估了 SMR 的反应。这些温度与季节性温度标准相匹配,每个季节基线温度递增0.6-1.2 °C,根据适度的气候变化情景预测,2040年和2100年的温度将递增0.6-1.2 °C。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,温度对SMR的影响随体型大小而变化,体型与温度之间存在负向交互作用,体型较大的同种动物对温度变化的敏感性低于体型较小的同种动物。从寒冷季节到温暖季节,SMR平均增加了14% °C-1,较小个体的SMR增加了18.4% °C-1,较大个体的SMR增加了11.4% °C-1。较小个体的SMR峰值比当前夏季基线温度增加0.6 °C(15.08% °C-1,Q10 = 4.2),而较大个体的SMR峰值比秋季温度增加1.2 °C(14.9% °C-1,Q10 = 3.9)。然而,当反映全球变暖的温度超过夏季温度时,较大个体的SMR趋于平稳,而较小个体的SMR则继续增加。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,体型较小的个体具有更广阔的热窗口来实现SMR,而体型较大的个体的SMR在夏季温度较高时将越来越受限制。
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来源期刊
Journal of thermal biology
Journal of thermal biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
7.40%
发文量
196
审稿时长
14.5 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Thermal Biology publishes articles that advance our knowledge on the ways and mechanisms through which temperature affects man and animals. This includes studies of their responses to these effects and on the ecological consequences. Directly relevant to this theme are: • The mechanisms of thermal limitation, heat and cold injury, and the resistance of organisms to extremes of temperature • The mechanisms involved in acclimation, acclimatization and evolutionary adaptation to temperature • Mechanisms underlying the patterns of hibernation, torpor, dormancy, aestivation and diapause • Effects of temperature on reproduction and development, growth, ageing and life-span • Studies on modelling heat transfer between organisms and their environment • The contributions of temperature to effects of climate change on animal species and man • Studies of conservation biology and physiology related to temperature • Behavioural and physiological regulation of body temperature including its pathophysiology and fever • Medical applications of hypo- and hyperthermia Article types: • Original articles • Review articles
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