Prior thermal acclimation gives White Sturgeon a fin up dealing with low oxygen.

IF 2.6 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Conservation Physiology Pub Date : 2025-01-06 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/conphys/coae089
Angelina M Dichiera, Kelly D Hannan, Garfield T Kwan, Nann A Fangue, Patricia M Schulte, Colin J Brauner
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Abstract

Assessing how at-risk species respond to co-occurring stressors is critical for predicting climate change vulnerability. In this study, we characterized how young-of-the-year White Sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) cope with warming and low oxygen (hypoxia) and investigated whether prior exposure to one stressor may improve the tolerance to a subsequent stressor through "cross-tolerance". Fish were acclimated to five temperatures within their natural range (14-22°C) for one month prior to assessment of thermal tolerance (critical thermal maxima, CTmax) and hypoxia tolerance (incipient lethal oxygen saturation, ILOS; tested at 20°C). White Sturgeon showed a high capacity for thermal acclimation, linearly increasing thermal tolerance with increasing acclimation temperature (slope = 0.55, adjusted R2 = 0.79), and an overall acclimation response ratio (ARR) of 0.58, from 14°C (CTmax = 29.4 ± 0.2°C, mean ± S.E.M.) to 22°C (CTmax = 34.1 ± 0.2°C). Acute warming most negatively impacted hypoxia tolerance in 14°C-acclimated fish (ILOS = 15.79 ± 0.74% air saturation), but prior acclimation to 20°C conferred the greatest hypoxia tolerance at this temperature (ILOS = 2.60 ± 1.74% air saturation). Interestingly, individuals that had been previously tested for thermal tolerance had lower hypoxia tolerance than naïve fish that had no prior testing. This was particularly apparent for hypoxia-tolerant 20°C-acclimated fish, whereas naïve fish persisted the entire 15-h duration of the hypoxia trial and did not lose equilibrium at air saturation levels below 20%. Warm-acclimated fish demonstrated significantly smaller relative ventricular mass, indicating potential changes to tissue oxygen delivery, but no other changes to red blood cell characteristics and somatic indices. These data suggest young-of-the-year White Sturgeon are resilient to warming and hypoxia, but the order in which these stressors are experienced and whether exposures are acute or chronic may have important effects on phenotype.

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先前的热驯化使白鲟鱼能够处理低氧。
评估濒危物种如何应对共同发生的压力对于预测气候变化脆弱性至关重要。在这项研究中,我们描述了幼年白鲟(acpenser transmontanus)如何应对变暖和低氧(缺氧),并研究了先前暴露于一种压力源是否可以通过“交叉耐受性”提高对后续压力源的耐受性。在评估热耐受性(临界热最大值,CTmax)和缺氧耐受性(初期致死氧饱和度,ILOS)之前,鱼在其自然范围(14-22°C)内适应5种温度一个月;在20°C下测试)。白鲟表现出较高的热驯化能力,随着驯化温度的升高,热耐受性呈线性增加(斜率= 0.55,调整后的R2 = 0.79),从14°C (CTmax = 29.4±0.2°C, mean±S.E.M.)到22°C (CTmax = 34.1±0.2°C)的总驯化响应比(ARR)为0.58。急性变暖对14°C驯化的鱼的缺氧耐受性影响最大(ILOS = 15.79±0.74%空气饱和度),但事先驯化到20°C在该温度下具有最大的缺氧耐受性(ILOS = 2.60±1.74%空气饱和度)。有趣的是,之前进行过热耐受性测试的个体比没有进行过测试的naïve鱼的缺氧耐受性更低。这对于适应20°c的耐缺氧鱼来说尤其明显,而naïve鱼在缺氧试验中坚持了整个15小时,并且在空气饱和度低于20%时没有失去平衡。温控鱼类的相对心室质量明显较小,表明组织氧输送可能发生变化,但红细胞特征和体细胞指标没有其他变化。这些数据表明,年轻的白鲟对温暖和缺氧有弹性,但这些压力源经历的顺序以及暴露是急性还是慢性可能对表型有重要影响。
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来源期刊
Conservation Physiology
Conservation Physiology Environmental Science-Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.70%
发文量
71
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Conservation Physiology is an online only, fully open access journal published on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology. Biodiversity across the globe faces a growing number of threats associated with human activities. Conservation Physiology will publish research on all taxa (microbes, plants and animals) focused on understanding and predicting how organisms, populations, ecosystems and natural resources respond to environmental change and stressors. Physiology is considered in the broadest possible terms to include functional and mechanistic responses at all scales. We also welcome research towards developing and refining strategies to rebuild populations, restore ecosystems, inform conservation policy, and manage living resources. We define conservation physiology broadly and encourage potential authors to contact the editorial team if they have any questions regarding the remit of the journal.
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