Clara Bellotto , Ashley M. Fowler , David J. Booth
{"title":"Overwintering performance of three juvenile temperate estuarine fishes","authors":"Clara Bellotto , Ashley M. Fowler , David J. Booth","doi":"10.1016/j.jembe.2025.152087","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>Estuaries, rich in biodiversity and economically valuable fish species, are increasingly threatened by climate change-induced factors that challenge fish resilience and survival. This study compared the juvenile performance of three estuarine fish species (eastern fortescue, <em>Centropogon australis</em>, common silverbiddy, <em>Gerres subfasciatus,</em> and eastern striped trumpeter, <em>Pelates sexlineatus</em>) at two water temperatures reflecting two scenarios: current Sydney winters (16 °C) and future winters under climate change (20 °C). The fishes' total range of acclimation duration was 16 days at each temperature level, and the experiment included two food levels (low and high), along with two different treatments that accounted for the orders of temperature exposure (20 °C then 16 °C, vs 16 °C then 20 °C). We used a broad range of behavioural and physiological metrics such as growth (change in mass and length), metabolic rate, bite rate, burst speed, boldness, shelter and predator escape response. Overall, as expected from metabolic theory, fish performance was generally greater at higher (future) winter temperatures than at lower (current) winter temperatures, with growth rates, change in total length, bite rate and aerobic scope higher at 20 °C than 16 °C for all species<em>. G. subfasciatus</em> and <em>P. sexlineatus</em> exhibited increased escape responses at 20 °C, with <em>P. sexlineatus</em> also showing greater boldness. Boldness was positively associated with bite rates in <em>P. sexlineatus</em>, potentially indicating foraging advantages under future warming for this species. The order of temperature treatment affected boldness for <em>G. subfasciatus</em> and growth, bite rate and burst speed for <em>P. sexlineatus</em>. Overall, and surprisingly, performance metrics were largely unrelated.</div><div>Contrary to expectations, food had no effect on fish performance either directly or interacting with temperature. Our findings suggest this study was conducted below the species' thermal optima, and future climate change may therefore favour temperate juvenile estuarine fishes at winter temperatures, with potential benefits differing among these species.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":50197,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology","volume":"584 ","pages":"Article 152087"},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022098125000073","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Estuaries, rich in biodiversity and economically valuable fish species, are increasingly threatened by climate change-induced factors that challenge fish resilience and survival. This study compared the juvenile performance of three estuarine fish species (eastern fortescue, Centropogon australis, common silverbiddy, Gerres subfasciatus, and eastern striped trumpeter, Pelates sexlineatus) at two water temperatures reflecting two scenarios: current Sydney winters (16 °C) and future winters under climate change (20 °C). The fishes' total range of acclimation duration was 16 days at each temperature level, and the experiment included two food levels (low and high), along with two different treatments that accounted for the orders of temperature exposure (20 °C then 16 °C, vs 16 °C then 20 °C). We used a broad range of behavioural and physiological metrics such as growth (change in mass and length), metabolic rate, bite rate, burst speed, boldness, shelter and predator escape response. Overall, as expected from metabolic theory, fish performance was generally greater at higher (future) winter temperatures than at lower (current) winter temperatures, with growth rates, change in total length, bite rate and aerobic scope higher at 20 °C than 16 °C for all species. G. subfasciatus and P. sexlineatus exhibited increased escape responses at 20 °C, with P. sexlineatus also showing greater boldness. Boldness was positively associated with bite rates in P. sexlineatus, potentially indicating foraging advantages under future warming for this species. The order of temperature treatment affected boldness for G. subfasciatus and growth, bite rate and burst speed for P. sexlineatus. Overall, and surprisingly, performance metrics were largely unrelated.
Contrary to expectations, food had no effect on fish performance either directly or interacting with temperature. Our findings suggest this study was conducted below the species' thermal optima, and future climate change may therefore favour temperate juvenile estuarine fishes at winter temperatures, with potential benefits differing among these species.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology provides a forum for experimental ecological research on marine organisms in relation to their environment. Topic areas include studies that focus on biochemistry, physiology, behavior, genetics, and ecological theory. The main emphasis of the Journal lies in hypothesis driven experimental work, both from the laboratory and the field. Natural experiments or descriptive studies that elucidate fundamental ecological processes are welcome. Submissions should have a broad ecological framework beyond the specific study organism or geographic region.
Short communications that highlight emerging issues and exciting discoveries within five printed pages will receive a rapid turnaround. Papers describing important new analytical, computational, experimental and theoretical techniques and methods are encouraged and will be highlighted as Methodological Advances. We welcome proposals for Review Papers synthesizing a specific field within marine ecology. Finally, the journal aims to publish Special Issues at regular intervals synthesizing a particular field of marine science. All printed papers undergo a peer review process before being accepted and will receive a first decision within three months.