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1.
Uptake rates of nitrate and phosphate were measured for four species and one variety of Porphyra from Long Island Sound (USA) at two temperatures and two nutrient medium concentrations at increasing intervals over a 24- or 48-h period. Maximum uptake rates found were: V30 μM0-1 h=73.8 μmol NO3 g−1 DW h−1 and V3 μM0-1 h=16.7 μmol PO4 g−1 DW h−1, in the two thinnest Porphyra. We found that the nitrate uptake rates were significantly greater at 30 μM than 3 μM NO3 concentration, and that the uptake rates decreased with time of exposure. Temperature (5, 15, and 25 °C) did not have as strong an effect on nitrate uptake rates as did nutrient concentration. Q10 values and uptake rates at four different nitrate concentrations indicated that nutrient uptake at 5 °C was initially an active process. After 24 h, the processes involved appeared passive as Q10 values were between 1.0 and 1.3 and nitrate uptake curves were linear. Nitrate uptake rates correlated positively with the surface area/volume (SA/V) ratio. No coherent trends were found for uptake of phosphate, except that the uptake rates were significantly higher in 30 μM NO3 medium as opposed to 3 μM NO3. We did not find any significant difference in uptake rate and pattern between the summer species Porphyra purpurea (Roth.) C. Agardh, the eurythermic Porphyra suborbiculata Kjellm., the winter species Porphyra rosengurttii J. Coll and J. Cox, and the two varieties of Porphyra leucosticta Thur. Le Jol. (both winter species).  相似文献   

2.
The present study examined the effect of salinity and temperature on the rate of oxygen consumption and total body osmolality of the triclad turbellarian Procerodes littoralis, a common marine flatworm normally found in areas where freshwater streams run out over intertidal areas. Extremes in environmental factors encountered by P. littoralis were recorded at the study site. These were salinity (0-44 psu), temperature (2.7-24.9 °C) and oxygen concentration (2.8-16.1 mg l−1). Respirometry experiments showed minimal oxygen consumption rates at the salinity extremes encountered by the study species (0 and 40 psu). Further experiments showed relatively constant oxygen consumption rates over the temperature range 5-20 °C and elevated consumption rates at temperatures above 25 °C. Total body osmolality of P. littoralis increased with increasing salinity. The study illustrates how a marine flatworm uses integrated physiological and behavioural mechanisms to successfully inhabit an environment that is predominantly freshwater for up to 75% of the tidal cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of temperature acclimation and acute temperature change were investigated in postprandial green shore crabs, Carcinus maenas. Oxygen uptake, gut contractions and transit rates and digestive efficiencies were measured for crabs acclimated to either 10 °C or 20 °C and subsequently exposed to treatment temperatures of 5, 15, or 25 °C. Temperature acclimation resulted in a partial metabolic compensation in unfed crabs, with higher oxygen uptake rates measured for the 10 °C acclimated group exposed to acute test temperatures. The Q10 values were higher than normal, probably because the acute temperature change prevented crabs from fully adjusting to the new temperature. Both the acclimation and treatment temperature altered the characteristics of the specific dynamic action (SDA). The duration of the response was longer for 20 °C acclimated crabs and was inversely related to the treatment temperature. The scope (peak oxygen consumption) was also higher for 20 °C acclimated crabs with a trend towards an inverse relationship with treatment temperature. Since the overall SDA (energy expenditure) is a function of both duration and scope, it was also higher for 20 °C acclimated crabs, with the highest value measured at the treatment temperature of 15 °C. The decline in total SDA after acute exposure to 5 and 25 °C suggests that both cold stress and limitations to oxygen supply at the temperature extremes could be affecting the SDA response. The contractions of the pyloric sac of the foregut region function to propel digesta through the gut, and contraction rates increased with increasing treatment temperature. This translated into faster transit rates with increasing treatment temperatures. Although pyloric sac contractions were higher for 20 °C acclimated crabs, temperature acclimation had no effect on transit rates. This suggests that a threshold level in pyloric sac contraction rates needs to be reached before it manifests itself on transit rates. Although there was a correlation between faster transit times and the shorter duration of the SDA response with increasing treatment temperature, transit rates do not make a good proxy for calculating the SDA characteristics. The digestive efficiency showed a trend towards a decreasing efficiency with increasing treatment temperature; the slower transit rates at the lower treatment temperatures allowing for more efficient nutrient absorption. Even though metabolic rates of 10 °C acclimated crabs were higher, there was no effect of acclimation temperature on digestive efficiency. This probably occurred because intracellular enzymes and digestive enzymes are modulated through different control pathways. These results give an insight into the metabolic and digestive physiology of Carcinus maenas as it makes feeding excursions between the subtidal and intertidal zones.  相似文献   

4.
Rates of inorganic nitrogen uptake by three Northeast US and three Asian species of Porphyra were compared in short-term incubations to evaluate potential for longer term and larger scale examination of bioremediation of nutrient-loaded effluents from finfish aquaculture facilities. The effects of nitrogen (N) species and concentration, temperature, acclimation history, and irradiance were investigated. Uptake rates increased ca. nine-fold from 20 to 150 μM N. Nitrate and ammonium uptake occurred at similar rates. Irradiance had a strong effect, with uptake at 40 μmol photons m−2 s−1only 55% of uptake at 150 μmol photons m−2 s−1. N-replete tissue took up inorganic nitrogen at rates that averaged only 60% of nutrient-deprived tissue. Although there were species (P. amplissima > (P. purpurea = P. umbilicalis)) and temperature effects (10 °C>5 °C>15 °C), interactions among factors indicated that individual species be considered separately. Overall, P. amplissima was the best Northeast US candidate. It took up ammonium at faster rates than other local species at 10 and 15 °C, two temperatures that fall within the expected range of industrial conditions for finfish operations.  相似文献   

5.
Hypoxia events, or low dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions, occur frequently in North Carolina estuaries during the summer. These events may have harmful effects on important fish stocks, including spot (Leiostomus xanthurus) and Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus), but their consequences are not well understood. We investigated direct mortality due to hypoxia in juvenile spot and Atlantic menhaden to determine how the extent of mortality varies with the severity of hypoxia and the duration of exposure, and to explore how vulnerability to hypoxia changes across species, fish size, and temperature.Atlantic menhaden and spot were tested at two temperatures, 25 and 30 °C, and three dissolved oxygen concentrations, 0.6, 0.9, and 1.2 ppm. Survival analyses were performed on the data relating survival rate of each species to dissolved oxygen concentration, duration of exposure, fish size, and temperature. The data were analyzed using an LC50 approach for comparative purposes, and 12-h LC50 estimates ranged from 0.9 to 1.1 ppm O2. Spot and menhaden exposed to 1.2 ppm O2 showed no mortality in 24 h at 25 °C, and only 30-40% mortality at 30 °C. In contrast, both species experienced 100% mortality in 2-6 h at 0.6 ppm O2. There was an effect of size on hypoxia tolerance, with small spot being less tolerant than large spot, while the converse size effect was observed for menhaden. Spot were consistently less tolerant to hypoxia than menhaden and both species were less tolerant to hypoxia at 30 °C than at 25 °C. Preliminary experiments showed a 24-h acclimation to sublethal levels of hypoxia significantly reduced mortality upon subsequent exposure to lethal hypoxia concentrations.Our results indicate that direct mortality due to hypoxia will vary with species, size, and temperature, but will likely only be substantial when these species are exposed to oxygen concentrations less than about 1 ppm O2. Given the severity of hypoxia necessary to cause mortality and the ability of fish to behaviorally avoid hypoxia, direct mortality due to hypoxia may have limited impacts on fish population dynamics. Therefore, the greatest effects due to hypoxia may be caused by the stress imposed by sublethal hypoxic conditions alone or in concert with other stressors, or by indirect effects incurred by avoiding hypoxic areas.  相似文献   

6.
Peter Newrkla 《Oecologia》1985,67(2):250-254
Summary The ostracod species Cytherissa lacustris was investigated with respect to its temperature and oxygen tolerance limits. In laboratory experiments the tolerance limits were found to be much wider than expected from field data. Hatching of first instars was observed in cultures up to 20° C. The tolerance limit for oxygen concentrations was less than 1 mg O2·l-1 at 10° C and 20 h exposure. The distribution pattern of C. lacustris along a depth profile in lake Attersee showed a maximum density between 10 and 20 m depth coinciding with temperatures between 4 and 15°C throughout the year. The size dependence of respiration rates of well adapted C. lacustris is within the normal range of small metazoans. Its weight specific rates of oxygen uptake indicate an adaptation plateau in the range between 10 and 15°C. Possible reasons and advantages of such an adaptation for C. lacustris are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Peat forming Sphagnum mosses are able to prevent the dominance of vascular plants under ombrotrophic conditions by efficiently scavenging atmospherically deposited nitrogen (N). N-uptake kinetics of these mosses are therefore expected to play a key role in differential N availability, plant competition, and carbon sequestration in Sphagnum peatlands. The interacting effects of rain N concentration and exposure time on moss N-uptake rates are, however, poorly understood.We investigated the effects of N-concentration (1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 500 µM), N-form (15N - ammonium or nitrate) and exposure time (0.5, 2, 72 h) on uptake kinetics for Sphagnum magellanicum from a pristine bog in Patagonia (Argentina) and from a Dutch bog exposed to decades of N-pollution.Uptake rates for ammonium were higher than for nitrate, and N-binding at adsorption sites was negligible. During the first 0.5 h, N-uptake followed saturation kinetics revealing a high affinity (Km 3.5–6.5 µM). Ammonium was taken up 8 times faster than nitrate, whereas over 72 hours this was only 2 times. Uptake rates decreased drastically with increasing exposure times, which implies that many short-term N-uptake experiments in literature may well have overestimated long-term uptake rates and ecosystem retention. Sphagnum from the polluted site (i.e. long-term N exposure) showed lower uptake rates than mosses from the pristine site, indicating an adaptive response. Sphagnum therefore appears to be highly efficient in using short N pulses (e.g. rainfall in pristine areas). This strategy has important ecological and evolutionary implications: at high N input rates, the risk of N-toxicity seems to be reduced by lower uptake rates of Sphagnum, at the expense of its long-term filter capacity and related competitive advantage over vascular plants. As shown by our conceptual model, interacting effects of N-deposition and climate change (changes in rainfall) will seriously alter the functioning of Sphagnum peatlands.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of temperature and oxygen saturation on the respiration rate of two cold stenothermal chironomids, Diamesa insignipes and Pseudodiamesa branickii were investigated. Fourth instar larvae were collected in winter in a glacio-rhithral stream (1300 m a.s.l., Alps, NE-Italy) and their respiration rate was measured with a Clark's electrode in the range 0-14 °C. The respiration rate was significantly higher in D. insignipes than in P. branickii at low temperatures (≤4 °C), higher in P. branickii between 8 and 12 °C and comparable at 14 °C. Higher values of R (regulation value), R25% (respiration rate at 25% oxygen saturation) and b1/b2 (slope ratio in piecewise linear regression), and lower values of Pc (critical pressure) and I (initial decrease) were recorded in P. branickii than in D. insignipes. These values are compatible with oxy-regulatory behaviour in P. branickii, whereas D. insignipes appeared to be almost an oxy-conformer. On the basis of this autoecological information, new implications regarding survival of species from cold, high altitude habitats under changing climatic conditions are made.  相似文献   

9.
The lion's paw scallop, Nodipecten nodosus, is subject to wide temperature variations on seasonal and short-term scales, and may be exposed to low-salinity events, caused by oceanographic and meteorological processes at its southern distribution limit (Santa Catarina State, Brazil). Such variations may have important implications on the distribution and on aquaculture site selection. The upper and lower temperature tolerances and the percentage of byssal attachment at different temperatures (11 to 35 °C) were studied for spat, juvenile and adult scallops. The lethal and sublethal effects of reduced salinity (13‰ to 33‰) on spat, juvenile and adult scallops were studied at ambient temperature (23.5 °C) and on spat also at low (16 °C) and high (28 °C) temperatures during 96-h bioassays. In addition, the influences of short exposure (1 h) to low salinity (13‰ and 17‰) at different temperatures (16 and 28 °C), and the effects of exposure (2 and 4 h) to high temperature (33 °C) at ambient salinity (33‰) were studied. N. nodosus is a moderately eurythermal but stenohaline tropical species, adults having lower tolerance to high temperature and low salinity than spat. Lethal temperatures for a 48-h exposure (LT50) were 29.8 °C for adult and juveniles, and 31.8 °C for spat. Maximum rate of byssal attachment occurred in a narrower temperature range for juveniles and adults (23 to 27 °C) than for spat (19 to 27 °C), which are suggested as the optimum ranges of temperatures for growth. Lethal salinities (LC50) for a 48-h exposure at ambient temperature were 23.2‰, 23.6‰ and 20.1‰ for adults, juveniles and spat, respectively, but the percent byssal attachment was significantly reduced below salinities of 29‰ indicating that scallops were physiologically stressed. A 1-h exposure to 17‰ was lethal to spat at 28 °C, but at 16 °C there was a 28.5% survival, 96 h after the exposure. Temperatures and salinity in coastal areas of southern Brazil can reach levels leading to sublethal effects, and in some sites, it may surpass the limits of tolerance for the survival of the species.  相似文献   

10.
The primitive pulmonate snail Amphibola crenata embeds embryos within a smooth mud collar on exposed estuarine mudflats in New Zealand. Development through hatching of free-swimming veliger larvae was monitored at 15 salinity and temperature combinations covering the range of 2-30 ppt salinity and 15-25 °C. The effect of exposure to air on developmental rate was also assessed. There were approximately 18,000 embryos in each egg collar. The total number of veligers released from standard-sized egg collar fragments varied with both temperature and salinity: embryonic survival was generally higher at 15 and 20 °C than at 25 °C; moreover, survival was generally highest at intermediate salinities, and greatly reduced at 2 ppt salinity regardless of temperature. Even at 2 ppt salinity, however, about one-third of embryos were able to develop successfully to hatching. Embryonic tolerance to low salinity was apparently a property of the embryos themselves, or of the surrounding egg capsules; there was no indication that the egg collars protected embryos from exposure to environmental stress. Mean hatching times ranged between 7 and 22 days, with reduced developmental rates both at lower temperature and lower salinity. At each salinity tested, developmental rate to hatching was similar at 20 and 25 °C. At 15 °C, time to hatching was approximately double that recorded at the two higher exposure temperatures. Exposing the egg collars to air for 6-9 h each day at 20 °C (20 ppt salinity) accelerated hatching by about 24 h, suggesting that developmental rate in this species is limited by the rates at which oxygen or wastes can diffuse into and from intact collars, respectively. Similarly, veligers from egg capsules that were artificially separated from egg collars at 20 °C developed faster than those within intact egg collars. The remarkable ability of embryos of A. crenata to hatch over such a wide range of temperatures and salinities, and to tolerate a considerable degree of exposure to air, explains the successful colonization of this species far up into New Zealand estuaries.  相似文献   

11.
Supercooling points (SCPs), lower lethal temperatures (LLTs), and the effect of short-term exposures (1 min) to low temperatures were examined in the adults of two stenothermal leptodirin species, Neobathyscia mancinii and Neobathyscia pasai (Coleoptera, Cholevidae). Specimens were collected from two caves in the Venetian Prealps (NE-Italy). Inter-species comparison highlighted lower values of SCP in N. mancinii (−7.1±0.9 °C) than in N. pasai (−6.4±0.3 °C), with no significant intersexual differences in both species. N. pasai (LLT50±SE=−16.96±2.30 °C; LLT100=−25.41 °C) tolerated short exposures to subzero temperatures better than N. mancinii (LLT50±SE=−4.89±1.08 °C; LLT100=−11.72 °C). According to the mortality and cumulative proportion of individual freezing curves (CPIF), SCPs and LLT100, N. pasai may be defined as “strongly freeze tolerant”, N. mancinii as “moderately freezing tolerant”. Overall, these results may justify the different in-cave habitat selection showed by the two species (N. pasai was abundant close to the entrance where the temperature is variable whereas N. mancinii was confined to the internal part of the cave where the temperature is constant throughout the year), and suggest hypotheses on the effects of such habitat selection on freeze tolerance strategy adopted. Finally, they give new insights into possible responses to climate changes in cave dwelling species.  相似文献   

12.
In lakes, trophic change and climate change shift the relationship between nutrients and physical factors, like temperature and photoperiod, and interactions between these factors should affect the growth of phytoplankton species differently. We therefore determined the relationship between P-limited specific growth rates and P-quota (biovolume basis) of Stephanodiscus minutulus and Nitzschia acicularis (diatoms) at or near light saturation in axenic, semi-continuous culture at 10, 15 and 20 °C and at 6, 9 and 12 h d−1 photoperiod. Photoperiod treatments were performed at constant daily light exposure to allow comparison. Under these conditions, we also performed competition experiments and estimated relative P-uptake rates of the species. Temperature strongly affected P-limited growth rates and relative P uptake rates, whereas photoperiod only affected maximum growth rates. S. minutulus used internal P more efficiently than N. acicularis. N. acicularis was the superior competitor for P due to a higher relative uptake rate and its superiority increased with increasing temperature and photoperiod. S. minutulus conformed to the Droop relationship but N. acicularis did not. A model with a temperature-dependent normalised half-saturation coefficient adequately described the factor interactions of both species. The temperature dependence of the quota model reflected each species’ specific adaptation to its ecological niche. The results demonstrate that increases in temperature or photoperiod can partially compensate for a decrease in P-quota under moderately limiting conditions, like during spring in temperate lakes. Thus warming may counteract de-eutrophication to some degree and a relative shift in growth factors can influence the phytoplankton species composition.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of temperature from 10 °C to 35 °C on the growth, total lipid content, and fatty acid composition of three species of tropical marine microalgae, Isochrysis sp., Nitzschia closterium, N. paleacea (formerly frustulum), and the Tahitian Isochrysis sp. (T.ISO), was investigated.Cultures of N. closterium, Isochrysis sp. and T.ISO grew very slowly at 35 °C, while N. closterium did not grow at temperatures higher than 30 °C or lower than 20 °C. N. paleacea was low-temperature tolerant, with cells growing slowly at 10 °C. N. paleacea produced the highest percentage of lipids at 10 °C, while the other species produced maximum amounts of lipid at 20 °C. None of the species maintained high levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) at high growth temperature and there was a significant inverse relationship between the percentage of PUFAs and temperature for N. paleacea. A curved relationship was found between temperature and percentage of PUFA for N. closterium and tropical Isochrysis sp., with the maximum production of PUFA at 25 °C and 20 °C, respectively. The two Nitzschia species produced higher levels of the essential fatty acid eicosapentaenoic acid [20:5(n-3)] at lower growth temperatures, but the two Isochrysis species had little change in percentage of 20:5(n-3) with temperature. Only T.ISO had the highest percentage of 22:6(n-3) at lowest growth temperature (11.4% total fatty acids at 10 °C).School of Mathematical and Physical SciencesAuthor for correspondence  相似文献   

14.
Summary The subdominant CAM species, Echinocereus viridiflorus and Mammillaria vivipara, collected from the shortgrass prairie in northeastern Colorado were pretreated and analyzed for gas exchange under cool temperatures (20/15°C) and warm temperatures (35/15°C). Well watered plants of both species under a 35/15°C thermoperiod fixed atmospheric CO2 during the night and early moring. Echinocereus viridiflorus grown and analyzed at 20/15°C fixed CO2 during the night, early morning and late afternoon but total carbon gain over a 24 h period is less than when grown and analyzed under the 35/15°C thermoperiod. Mammillaria vivipara grown and analyzed at 20/15°C assimilates CO2 at low rates during all parts of a 24 h period with the greatest CO2 fixation rates occuring from midday to late afternoon. The total carbon gain under the 20/15°C thermoperiod is less than that for this species under the 35/15°C thermoperiod. Decreasing the night temperature of plants grown under the warm conditions to 10°C or 5°C results in a depression of the night CO2 fixation in both species. E. viridiflorus from the cool growth conditions showed an enhancement of the CO2 uptake during the night, early morning and late afternoon when subjected to the cooler night temperatures (10°C and 5°C). The CO2 uptake of M. vivipara grown at 20/15°C shows an enhancement during the night and early morning while the CO2 fixation during midday and late afternoon is slightly depressed under cool night temperatures (10° and 5°C). Under the 35/15°C thermoperiod both species exhibit depressed rates of CO2 fixation during the night and early morning when water stressed. Plants of both species grown under the 20/15°C thermoperiod exhibit no net CO2 fixation following five weeks of water deprivation. Upon rewatering, E. viridiflorus begins to recover its capacity for CO2 fixation within 24 h under both the warm and cool temperature regimes. However, M. vivipara did not show recovery within 48 h following rewatering under the warm or cool temperature regime. Contrasting the patterns of gas exchange of the subdominant species, E. viridiflorus and M. vivipara, with a dominant CAM species of the shortgrass prairie, Opuntia polyacantha reveals significant differences that may well dictate the role of these species in this ecosystem. E. viridiflorus and M. vivipara have a lower capacity of carbon gain and recovery from water stress than O. polyacantha mainly due to their lack of late afternoon CO2 uptake. This study suggests that carbon gain plays an important role in limiting E. viridiflorus and M. vivipara in the shortgrass prairie ecosystem.  相似文献   

15.
Thalassinidean shrimp are among the most important bioturbators in coastal ecosystems. The species Lepidophthalmus louisianensis and Callichirus islagrande are found in dense aggregations (up to 400 burrows m−2) along sandy and muddy shores of the northern Gulf of Mexico. These shrimp actively ventilate their burrows to provide oxygen and eliminate wastes. In doing so, they expel nutrient-rich burrow water to the overlying water column, potentially altering nutrient cycling and benthic primary productivity. To develop a mechanistic understanding of the role of burrowing shrimp in nutrient processes, we must first examine how changes in environmental conditions alter the frequency, strength, and duration of ventilation. Field measurements of burrow temperature and salinity suggest that the burrow serves as a buffer from the highly variable conditions found in these estuarine, intertidal habitats. Temperatures at sediment depths >30 cm were generally warmer in winter and cooler in summer than at the sediment surface. Burrow salinities, measured at low tide, were consistently higher than adjacent open water. We used these measurements to parameterize laboratory studies of burrow ventilation in artificial burrows made of plastic tubing and in more natural sediment mesocosms, and studies of oxygen consumption in small glass containers. Rates of oxygen consumption and burrow ventilation by L. louisianensis were lower than those of C. islagrande, perhaps reflecting a lower overall activity rate in the former species which resides in less permeable sediments. Generally, increased temperature had a significant positive effect on oxygen consumption for both species. Salinity had no effect on oxygen consumption by L. louisianensis, reflecting the ability of this species to exist in a wide range of salinities. In contrast, oxygen consumption rates of C. islagrande, which is less tolerant of low salinity, were significantly higher at 35‰ than at 20‰. Ventilation rates were highly variable, and shrimp in artificial burrows tended to have consistently higher ventilation rates than those in sediment mesocosms. There is a trend toward more frequent ventilation at 30 °C for both species. Salinity had no effect on ventilation for either species. Our results suggest that thalassinideans exhibit highly variable and species-specific ventilation patterns that are more likely to be affected by temperature than salinity. Increased ventilation at higher temperatures seems to coincide with increased oxygen consumption at these temperatures, although a similar finding was not made for salinity treatments.  相似文献   

16.
This study aimed at investigating changes in feeding rates of three scleractinian coral species (Stylophora pistillata, Turbinaria reniformis and Galaxea fascicularis) between control (26 °C) and short-term stress conditions (31 °C), and to assess the effect of feeding on the photosynthetic efficiency of the corals. Feeding rates varied according to the feeding effort of the corals, itself depending on the environmental conditions. Indeed, S. pistillata significantly decreased its feeding rates at 31 °C, while rates of T. reniformis and G. fascicularis were increased between 26 and 31 °C. Independently of the feeding rates, food supply helped in preventing damage to the photosynthetic apparatus of the zooxanthellae. Indeed, starved corals from the three species showed significant decrease in both the electron transport rates and in the photosynthetic rates, following a loss in the amount of chlorophyll and experiencing photoinhibition of the photosystem II. However, no bleaching was observed in heated fed corals, with no decrease in their photosynthetic efficiency or performance.  相似文献   

17.
Oxygen consumption of Amphibola crenata (Gmelin) was measured in various salinity-temperature combinations (< 0.1‰ to 41‰ salinity and 5 to 30°C) in air, and following exposure to declining oxygen tensions. In all experimental conditions, respiration varied with the 0.44 power of the body weight (sd = 0.14). The aquatic rate was consistently higher than the aerial rate of oxygen consumption, although at 30 °C the two rates were similar. Oxygen consumption increased with temperature up to 25 °C in all salinities; the lowest values were recorded at temperatures below 10 °C and at 30 °C in the most dilute medium. At all exposure temperatures, the oxygen consumption of Amphibola decreased regularly with salinity down to 0.1 ‰, and following exposure to concentrated sea water (41‰). Salinity had the least effect at 15 °C which was the acclimation temperature. In general, all of the temperature coefficients (Q10 values) were low, < 1.65. However, Q10 values above 2.8 were recorded at a salinity of 17.8‰ between 10 and 15 °C. Oxygen consumption of all size classes of Amphibola was more temperature dependent in air than in water and small individuals show a greater difference between their aerial and aquatic rates than larger snails. The rates of oxygen consumption in declining oxygen tensions were expressed as fractions of the rates in air saturated sea water at each experimental salinity-temperature combination. The quadratic coefficient B2 becomes increasingly more negative with both decreasing salinity and temperatures up to 20 °C. At higher temperatures (25 and 30 °C) the response is reversed such that O2 uptake in snails becomes increasingly independent of declining oxygen tensions at higher salinities. On exposure to a salinity of 4‰, Amphibola showed no systematic response to declining oxygen tension with respect to temperature. The ability of Amphibola to maintain its rate of oxygen consumption in a wide range of environmental conditions is discussed in relation to its potential for invading terrestrial habitats and its widespread distribution on New Zealand's intertidal mudflats.  相似文献   

18.
Protein synthesis is a major determinant of growth and yet little is known about the environmental factors that influence protein synthesis rates in farmed freshwater prawns. To this end, post-larvae and juveniles of Macrobrachium rosenbergii were exposed to various salinities (0, 14, 30‰) to determine whole-animal rates of fractional protein synthesis (ks) and oxygen uptake. In the post-larvae that migrate upstream from brackish to freshwater areas, whole-animal ks was unaffected by salinity, but rates of oxygen uptake were significantly lower at 14‰. In the freshwater juveniles, a different response was observed, as mean ks was significantly higher at 14‰ compared with 0‰, but rates of oxygen uptake remained unchanged. Such differences are thought to be related to the energetic costs of osmoregulation and to the ability to maintain osmotic gradients in freshwater. In an additional experiment, acclimation temperature (20, 26, 30 °C) had a direct effect on ks in juveniles held at 0‰. In all cases, changes in ks resulted from alterations in RNA activity at constant RNA capacity. In juveniles at least, whole-animal rates of protein synthesis were highest at 14‰ and 30 °C which corresponds to the optimal salinity and temperature recommended for the growth and culture of M. rosenbergii.  相似文献   

19.
This study reports temperature effects on paralarvae from a benthic octopus species, Octopus huttoni, found throughout New Zealand and temperate Australia. We quantified the thermal tolerance, thermal preference and temperature-dependent respiration rates in 1-5 days old paralarvae. Thermal stress (1 °C increase h−1) and thermal selection (∼10-24 °C vertical gradient) experiments were conducted with paralarvae reared for 4 days at 16 °C. In addition, measurement of oxygen consumption at 10, 15, 20 and 25 °C was made for paralarvae aged 1, 4 and 5 days using microrespirometry. Onset of spasms, rigour (CTmax) and mortality (upper lethal limit) occurred for 50% of experimental animals at, respectively, 26.0±0.2 °C, 27.8±0.2 °C and 31.4±0.1 °C. The upper, 23.1±0.2 °C, and lower, 15.0±1.7 °C, temperatures actively avoided by paralarvae correspond with the temperature range over which normal behaviours were observed in the thermal stress experiments. Over the temperature range of 10 °C-25 °C, respiration rates, standardized for an individual larva, increased with age, from 54.0 to 165.2 nmol larvae−1 h−1 in one-day old larvae to 40.1-99.4 nmol h−1 at five days. Older larvae showed a lesser response to increased temperature: the effect of increasing temperature from 20 to 25 °C (Q10) on 5 days old larvae (Q10=1.35) was lower when compared with the 1 day old larvae (Q10=1.68). The lower Q10 in older larvae may reflect age-related changes in metabolic processes or a greater scope of older larvae to respond to thermal stress such as by reducing activity. Collectively, our data indicate that temperatures >25 °C may be a critical temperature. Further studies on the population-level variation in thermal tolerance in this species are warranted to predict how continued increases in ocean temperature will limit O. huttoni at early larval stages across the range of this species.  相似文献   

20.
Global warming and associated increases in the frequency and amplitude of extreme weather events, such as heat waves, may adversely affect tropical rainforest plants via significantly increased tissue temperatures. In this study, the response to two temperature regimes was assessed in seedlings of the neotropical pioneer tree species, Ficus insipida. Plants were cultivated in growth chambers at strongly elevated daytime temperature (39 °C), combined with either close to natural (22 °C) or elevated (32 °C) nighttime temperatures. Under both growth regimes, the critical temperature for irreversible leaf damage, determined by changes in chlorophyll a fluorescence, was approximately 51 °C. This is comparable to values found in F. insipida growing under natural ambient conditions and indicates a limited potential for heat tolerance acclimation of this tropical forest tree species. Yet, under high nighttime temperature, growth was strongly enhanced, accompanied by increased rates of net photosynthetic CO2 uptake and diminished temperature dependence of leaf-level dark respiration, consistent with thermal acclimation of these key physiological parameters.  相似文献   

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