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Thermal biology of bonefish (Albula vulpes) in Bahamian coastal waters and tidal creeks: An integrated laboratory and field study
Authors:Karen J Murchie  SJ Cooke  AJ Danylchuk  SE DanylchukTL Goldberg  CD Suski  DP Philipp
Institution:a Fish Ecology and Conservation Physiology Laboratory, Department of Biology, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ont., Canada K1S 5B6
b Flats Ecology and Conservation Program, Cape Eleuthera Institute, Eleuthera, The Bahamas
c Institute of Environmental Science, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada
d Illinois Natural History Survey, Institute for Natural Resource Sustainability, University of Illinois, Champaign, IL, USA
e Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA
f Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
g Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract:Little is known about the thermal tolerances of fish that occupy tropical intertidal habitats or how their distribution, physiological condition, and survival are influenced by water temperature. We used a combination of laboratory and field approaches to study the thermal biology of bonefish, Albula vulpes, a fish species that relies on nearshore intertidal habitats throughout the Caribbean. The critical thermal maximum (CTMax) for bonefish was determined to be 36.4±0.5 and 37.9±0.5 °C for fish acclimated to 27.3±1.3 and 30.2±1.4 °C, respectively, and these tolerances are below maximal temperatures recorded in the tropical tidal habitats where bonefish frequently reside (i.e., up to 40.6 °C). In addition, daily temperatures can fluctuate up to 11.4 °C over a 24-h period emphasizing the dramatic range of temperatures that could be experienced by bonefish on a diel basis. Use of an acoustic telemetry array to monitor bonefish movements coupled with hourly temperature data collected within tidal creeks revealed a significant positive relationship between the amount of time bonefish spent in the upper portions of the creeks with the increasing maximal water temperature. This behavior is likely in response to feeding requirements necessary to fuel elevated metabolic demands when water temperatures generally warm, and also to avoid predators. For fish held in the laboratory, reaching CTMax temperatures elicited a secondary stress response that included an increase in blood lactate, glucose, and potassium levels. A field study that involved exposing fish to a standardized handling stressor at temperatures approaching their CTMax generated severe physiological disturbances relative to fish exposed to the same stressor at cooler temperatures. In addition, evaluation of the short-term survival of bonefish after surgical implantation of telemetry tags revealed that there was a positive relationship between water temperature at time of tagging and mortality. Collectively, the data from these laboratory and field studies suggest that bonefish occupy habitats that approach their laboratory-determined CTMax and can apparently do so without significant sub-lethal physiological consequences or mortality, except when exposed to additional stressors.
Keywords:Critical thermal maximum  Temperature tolerance  Stress physiology  Bonefish
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