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1.
The resistance time of Etroplus suratensis (Bloch) and Therapon jarbua (Forsskal) were determined for fish acclimated to a series of temperatures 20°C, 25°C, 28°C, 30°C, and 35°C. The results indicated that these two species of fishes showed increased thermal resistance when acclimation temperatures were increased or decreased, respectively. The biokinetic range of temperature for E. suratensis is from 12°C to 46°C and that for T. jarbua is from 8°C to 44°C.  相似文献   

2.
Fishes are always exposed to various environmental stresses and the chances of succumbing to such stresses are of great physiological concern. Any change in temperature from the ambient condition can induce various metabolic and physiological changes in the body. The present study evaluates the effects of temperature induced stress on the antioxidant profile of Etroplus suratensis such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase and lipid peroxidation. Fishes of same size were kept in a thermostatized bath at three different temperature regimes viz 16 °C, 27 °C (ambient temperature) and 38 °C for 72 h. These temperatures were selected based on the CT Max (Critical Thermal Maximum) and CT Min (Critical Thermal Minimum) exhibited by E. suratensis. Superoxide dismutase and catalase activity was found maximum in brain and muscle respectively during the 48th hour of exposure in fishes kept at 38 °C. At 16 °C the antioxidant response of glutathione peroxidase was maximum in muscles, whereas the lipid peroxidation rate was found to be high in gills compared to other tissues. The profound increase in the levels of oxidative stress related biomarkers indicate that the thermal stressors severely affected oxidative state of E. suratensis by the second day of experiment. Such down-regulation of redox state accompanied with the induction of oxidative stress cascade may lead to physiological damage in various tissues in fishes, in vivo. However current data indicate that a transition to low and high temperature environment from ambient condition severely affected the levels and profile of the antioxidant markers overtime in E. suratensis.  相似文献   

3.
Temperature influences the geographic range, physiology, and behavior of many ectothermic species, including the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. Thermal parameters were experimentally determined for wild-caught lionfish at different acclimation temperatures (13, 20, 25 and 32 °C). Preferences and avoidance were evaluated using a videographic shuttlebox system, while critical thermal methodology evaluated tolerance. The lionfish thermal niche was compared experimentally to two co-occurring reef fishes (graysby Cephalopholis cruentata and schoolmaster Lutjanus apodus) also acclimated to 25 °C. The physiologically optimal temperature for lionfish is likely 28.7 ± 1 °C. Lionfish behavioral thermoregulation was generally linked to acclimation history; tolerance and avoidance increased significantly at higher acclimation temperatures, but final preference did not. The tolerance polygon of lionfish shows a strong correlation between thermal limits and acclimation temperature, with the highest CTmax at 39.5 °C and the lowest CTmin at 9.5 °C. The tolerance range of invasive lionfish (24.61 °C) is narrower than those of native graysby (25.25 °C) and schoolmaster (26.87 °C), mostly because of lower thermal maxima in the former. Results show that lionfish display “acquired” thermal tolerance at higher and lower acclimation temperatures, but are no more eurythermal than other tropical fishes. Collectively, these results suggest that while lionfish range expansion in the western Atlantic is likely over the next century from rising winter sea temperatures due to climate change, the magnitude of poleward radiation of this invasive species is limited and will likely be equivalent to native tropical and subtropical fishes with similar thermal minima.  相似文献   

4.
Notothenioid fishes of the Southern Ocean have evolved under cold and stable temperatures for millions of years. Due to rising temperatures in the Southern Ocean, investigating thermal limits and the capacities for inducing a temperature acclimation response in notothenioids has become of increasing interest. Here, we investigated effects of temperature acclimation on cardiorespiratory responses and cardiac and skeletal muscle energy metabolism in a benthic Antarctic notothenioid, Trematomus bernacchii. We acclimated specimens to ?1, 2 and 4.5 °C for 14 days and quantified heart rates and ventilation rates during an acute increase in temperature. Ventilation rates showed an effect of acclimation both at initial steady-state acclimation conditions and during an acute temperature increase, suggesting a partial thermal compensatory response. However, acclimation did not affect heart rates at steady-state acclimation conditions and the temperatures at which onset of cardiac arrhythmia occurred, suggesting lack of inducible thermal tolerance in cardiac performance. Citrate synthase (CS), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and 3-hydroxyacyl dehydrogenase activities in skeletal muscle tissues suggested acclimation-induced shifts in metabolic fuel preferences, and a marked increase in LDH activity with acclimation to 4.5 °C showed an increase in anaerobic metabolism. In heart tissue, CS and LDH activities decreased with acclimation to 4.5 °C, suggesting reduced cardiac ATP production. Overall, the data suggest a partial acclimatory response to temperature by T. bernacchii and support the hypothesis that reduced cardiac acclimatory capacity may play a role in limiting the thermal plasticity of T. bernacchii.  相似文献   

5.
Crticial thermal maxima (CTM) of three species of Hawaiian estuarine fishes were determined in relation to acclimation temperature and time of day. The species studied were Mugil cephalus L., Chelon engeli (Bleeker) and Kuhlia sandvicensis (Steindachner). Critical thermal maxima of all three species were significantly affected by acclimation temperature and time. In relation to acclimation temperature, Mugil cephalus and Chelon engeli have similar critical thermal maxima with Kuhlia sandvicensis having a critical thermal maxima about 1° C below that of the other two species studied. Mugil cephalus and Chelon engeli showed an increasing critical thermal maxima toward midday which decreased therafter. Critical thermal maximum of Kuhlia sandvicensis increased throughout the day.  相似文献   

6.
Significant increases in heat tolerance (time of survival at 14°C) were observed for some, but not all, species of notothenioid fishes collected from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica (77°51′S) following acclimation to 4°C. The increase in thermal tolerance was rapid in Trematomus bernacchii, developing within 1–2 days of acclimation to 4°C. Long-term (6–8 weeks) acclimation to 4°C led to greater heat tolerance in Trematomus pennellii than in T. bernacchii. Unlike its demersal congeners, the cryopelagic notothenioid Pagothenia borchgrevinki did not increase heat tolerance during warm acclimation. A deep-living zoarcid fish, Lycodichthys dearborni, also failed to increase heat tolerance, but survived significantly (> threefold) longer at 14°C than the notothenioids.  相似文献   

7.
8.
We acclimated adults of Takydromus septentrionalis (northern grass lizard) from four localities (populations) under identical thermal conditions to examine whether local thermal conditions have a fixed influence on thermal preference and thermal tolerance in the species. Selected body temperature (Tsel), critical thermal minimum (CTMin), and critical thermal maximum (CTMax) did not differ between sexes and among localities in lizards kept under identical laboratory conditions for ∼5 months, and the interaction effects between sex and locality on these measures were not significant. Lizards acclimated to the three constant temperatures (20, 25, and 35°C) differed in Tsel, CTMin, and CTMax. Tsel, CTMin, and CTMax all shifted upward as acclimation temperature increased, with Tsel shifting from 32.0 to 34.1°C, CTMin from 4.9 to 8.0°C, and CTMax from 42.0 to 44.5°C at the change-over of acclimation temperature from 20 to 35°C. Lizards acclimated to the three constant temperatures also differed in the range of viable body temperatures; the range was widest in the 25°C treatment (38.1°C) and narrowest in the 35°C treatment (36.5°C), with the 20°C treatment in between (37.2°C). The results of this study show that local thermal conditions do not have a fixed influence on thermal preference and thermal tolerance in T. septentrionalis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The effects of the density of Hymenolepis diminuta and the effects of thermal acclimation on the water balance of Tenebrio molitor were examined. Also, the subsequent infectivity of the cysticercoids for rats were investigated. T. molitor beetles were fed known numbers of H. diminuta eggs and then were kept at 15° or 25°C for 14 days. After 14 days, beetles were desiccated and water loss was determined. Parasite density did not significantly affect transpiratory water loss in T. molitor kept at 15° or 25°C following 24 or 48 hr of desiccation. However, after 72 hr of desiccation, beetles maintained at 15°C evidently could not regulate water efficiently since there was a significant increase in the transpiratory water loss as parasite density increased. Beetles acclimated at 15°C produced fewer cysticercoids than did beetles maintained at 25°C. Also, fewer adult worms were recovered from rats intubated with cysticercoids from heavily infected, 15°C-acclimated beetles. Apparently, heavily infected beetles acclimated to 15°C do not produce viable cysticercoids.  相似文献   

11.
This study aimed to investigate temperature effect on physiological and biochemical responses of the marine medaka Oryzias melastigma larvae. The fish were subjected to a stepwise temperature change at a rate of 1 °C/h increasing or decreasing from 25 °C (the control) to six target temperatures (12, 13, 15, 20, 28 and 32 °C) respectively, followed by a 7-day thermal acclimation at each target temperature. The fish were fed ad libitum during the experiment. The results showed that cumulative mortalities were significantly increased at low temperatures (12 and 13 °C) and at the highest temperature (32 °C). For the survivors, their growth profile closely followed the left-skewed ‘thermal performance curve’. Routine oxygen consumption rates of fish larvae were significantly elevated at 32 °C but suppressed at 13 and 15 °C (due to a high mortality, larvae from 12 °C were not examined). Levels of heat shock proteins and activities of malate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase were also measured in fish larvae exposed at 15, 25 and 32 °C. The activities of both enzymes were significantly increased at both 15 and 32 °C, where the fish larvae probably suffered from thermal discomfort and increased anaerobic components so as to compensate the mismatch of energy demand and supply at these thermal extremes. Coincidently, heat shock proteins were also up-regulated at both 15 and 32 °C, enabling cellular protection. Moreover, the critical thermal maxima and minima of fish larvae increased significantly with increasing acclimation temperature, implying that the fish could develop some degrees of thermal tolerance through temperature acclimation.  相似文献   

12.
Brachymystax lenok tsinlingensis is an endangered teleost fish species that occurs in the Qinling Mountain region of China. It also happens to represent the southernmost distribution of an endemic Salmonid fish worldwide. Recently, the habitat of this species shifted towards a higher altitude presumably because of climate change, indicating that this species might be suffering from thermal stress. However, information on the thermal physiology of this species is extremely limited. Accordingly, we investigated the effects of acclimation temperature (6, 12, and 18 °C) on ecologically relevant end points such as critical thermal limits, swimming performance and metabolic rate. Our results showed that elevated acclimation temperatures resulted in increased thermal tolerance and decreased swimming efficiency. High temperature (i.e., 18 °C) did not have a marked effect on the critical swimming speed and the maximum metabolic rate but caused an increase in the energetic cost of transport compared with the results at 12 °C. Interestingly, we found that both the acclimation response ratio and the critical thermal maxima of B. lenok tsinlingensis were higher than that of many other Salmonidae fishes, suggesting that this species responds plastically to temperature changes and has a high thermal tolerance. These characteristics are hypothesized to be related to the southernmost distribution of this species.  相似文献   

13.
Branch cultures ofEucheuma alvarezii Doty var.tambalang Doty, farmed in the Philippines, andE. isiforme (C. Agardh) J. Agardh var.denudatum Cheney, from the west coast of Florida, were gradually transferred through three temperature regimes over a 6-week period. Photosynthetic responses were measured under a series of irradiances (P-I curves) and temperatures to determine immediate responses of the plants before, during and after completion of the transfers. The Philippine variety did not show acclimation to 18 °C either after gradual transfer from the initial culture temperature of 25 °C or when abruptly transferred from 25 to 18 °C. The Florida variety did show acclimation to 25 °C when gradually transferred from 18 to 22 to 25 °C over the 6-week period, but not if abruptly transferred from 18 to 25 °C. The west coast variety ofE. isiforme from Florida shows a temperature acclimation ability that parallels the seasonal changes in water temperature of its habitat.  相似文献   

14.
  • (1)The preferred temperatures of Macrobrachium acanthurus were determined for prawns acclimated to 20°C, 23°C, 26°C, 29°C and 32°C, and the final preferendum estimate was (29.5°C).
  • (2)The critical thermal minima (CTMin) and maxima (CTMax) were 11.0°C, 12.1°C, 13.0°C and 14.8°C, and 34.2°C, 35.0°C, 36.1°C and 39.8°C, respectively.
  • (3)The zone of thermal tolerance assessed using the CTMin and CTMax boundaries was 644°C2.
  • (4)The acclimation response ratio was between 0.33 and 0.62.
  • (5)To cultivate this species in the southeastern region of México it should be done in not <15°C (CTMin) during the winter and below 38°C in summer (CTMax).
  相似文献   

15.
Schizopygopsis younghusbandi is an endemic fish of Tibet characterized by slow growth. Artificial stock enhancement was applied to rebuild the natural population of S. younghusbandi in recent years. However, the optimal growth temperature and thermal tolerance of S. younghusbandi has not been studied, which restricts the production of S. younghusbandi fingerling for stock enhancement. The purpose of this paper is to determine the growth, critical thermal maximum (CTMax), lethal thermal maximum (LTMax) and acclimation response ratio (ARR) of S. younghusbandi juveniles (body weight 5.7 ± 1.2 g) at three acclimation temperature levels (10, 15, 20°C). The results showed that acclimation temperature significantly affected the growth, CTMax, LTMax and ARR of the experimental fish. Largest final weight (7.5 ± 2.3 g) was recorded in 15°C group. At a heating rate of 1°C/30 min, CTMax ranged from 30.98 to 32.01°C and LTMax ranged from 31.76 to 32.31°C in the three acclimation temperatures. Schizopygopsis younghusbandi had lower ARR value (0.097) than most other fish species. Low ARR value indicates that S. younghusbandi may have narrower thermal tolerance range and weaker acclimation ability to global warming. For successful aquaculture of S. younghusbandi juveniles, temperature should be maintained around 15°C.  相似文献   

16.
The study of thermal tolerance and acclimation capacity in Jack Beardsley mealybug, Pseudococcus jackbeardsleyi Gimpel and Miller is the crucial step in determining their abilities to cope with climate change. Thus, the aim of this research was to determine the effects of acclimation temperatures on the changes in thermal tolerance of P. jackbeardsleyi. The influences of acclimation temperature at moderate (25?°C) and high (35?°C) temperatures on their lower and upper thermal limits were measured composed of critical thermal minimum (CTmin), maximum (CTmax), chill coma temperature (CCT) and heat coma temperature (HCT) for first instar nymphs and adults. The important information derived from this study revealed that the upper thermal limits of adults are constrained to a relative narrow range that will make them sensitive to relative small changes in temperatures, whilst all mean upper thermal indices at 35?°C were significantly higher than at 25?°C for nymphs. For this highlight notice, nymphs have more potential to change their upper thermal limits which will allow them to withstand high temperatures in the field. These results are a sign to warn us that P. jackbeardsleyi could become highly noxious which cause severe outbreaks damage to the crops in the tropics under global warming.  相似文献   

17.
The negative effects of climate alteration on coral reef fishes receive ever increasing attention; however, implications of rising sea temperatures on fishes inhabiting marine nursery environments are poorly understood. We used critical thermal methodology to quantify critical thermal maxima (CTmaxima) of juvenile squaretail mullet (Liza vaigiensis) and juvenile crescent terapon (Terapon jarbua) captured from shallow seagrass nursery areas around Hoga Island, southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. We tested the hypothesis that these distantly related fishes, when acclimated to cycling temperatures, would display higher CTmaxima than groups acclimated at constant temperatures. Groups of mullet acclimated to a constant temperature of 37 °C and temperature cycles of 35 to 39 °C or 37 to 41 °C displayed statistically similar mean CTmaxima of 44.7, 44.4 and 44.8 °C, respectively. Likewise, terapon acclimated at temperature cycles of 37 to 40 °C did not display a higher CTmaxima than fish acclimated at a constant temperature of 37 °C, with both acclimation groups' mean CTmaxima equal to 43.8 °C. Acclimation to higher cycling temperatures did not result in significant upper temperature tolerance acquisition for either species; however, mullet values were significantly higher than those seen in terapon (P < 0.0001). These data suggest that mullet and terapon will not suffer direct thermal effects should shallow nursery temperature increases be marginally higher than 1-2 °C above ~ 27 °C, and they provide evidence that the upper thermal tolerance of fishes inhabiting shallow seagrass and mangrove areas can approach the biokinetic limits for vertebrate life. Tropical marine fishes inhabiting fringing nursery environments may have the upper thermal tolerance necessary to endure substantial increases in sea temperatures.  相似文献   

18.
Studies on how flatfish cardiovascular function responds to environmental challenges are limited, and have largely relied upon indirect methodologies (i.e. Fick principle). Thus, we measured dorsal aortic blood pressure (PDA) and cardiac function in 8 and 15 °C-acclimated flounder exposed to graded hypoxia, and in 8 °C-acclimated fish exposed to an acute temperature increase to their critical thermal maximum (CTM). The extent of bradycardia in 8 °C-acclimated fish (decrease in heart rate of 41%) was consistent with that observed for other teleosts, as was this species' CTM (25.8 ± 0.5 °C) and its cardiac response to increasing temperature. However, this study provides further examples of how cardiovascular function is controlled differently in the flounder as compared with other fishes. First, the onset of bradycardia in 8 °C-acclimated fish occurred earlier than expected for this inactive and hypoxia-tolerant species (60% water air saturation). Second, resting cardiac output was similar in flounder acclimated to 8 and 15 °C (~ 15 mL min? 1 kg? 1), and hypoxic bradycardia was surprisingly absent at 15 °C. Finally, systemic vascular resistance decreased when flounder were exposed to elevated temperature, and this resulted in a 26% fall in PDA. These are novel findings, however, the extent to which the flounder's behaviour influenced some of the results is unclear.  相似文献   

19.
Thermal plasticity can help organisms coping with climate change. In this study, we analyse how laboratory populations of the ectotherm species Drosophila subobscura, originally from two distinct latitudes and evolving for several generations in a stable thermal environment (18 °C), respond plastically to new thermal challenges. We measured adult performance (fecundity traits as a fitness proxy) of the experimental populations when exposed to five thermal regimes, three with the same temperature during development and adulthood (15-15 °C, 18-18 °C, 25-25 °C), and two where flies developed at 18 °C and were exposed, during adulthood, to either 15 °C or 25 °C. Here, we test whether (1) flies undergo stress at the two more extreme temperatures; (2) development at a given temperature enhances adult performance at such temperature (i.e. acclimation), and (3) populations with different biogeographical history show plasticity differences. Our findings show (1) an optimal performance at 18 °C only if flies were subjected to the same temperature as juveniles and adults; (2) the occurrence of developmental acclimation at lower temperatures; (3) detrimental effects of higher developmental temperature on adult performance; and (4) a minor impact of historical background on thermal response. Our study indicates that thermal plasticity during development may have a limited role in helping adults cope with warmer - though not colder - temperatures, with a potential negative impact on population persistence under climate change. It also emphasizes the importance of analysing the impact of temperature on all stages of the life cycle to better characterize the thermal limits.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen demand generally increases in ectotherms as temperature rises in order to sustain oxidative phosphorylation by mitochondria. The thermal plasticity of ectotherm metabolism, such as that of fishes, dictates a species survival and is of importance to understand within an era of warming climates. Within this study the whole animal O2 consumption rate of a common New Zealand intertidal triplefin fish, Forsterygion lapillum, was investigated at different acclimation temperatures (15, 18, 21, 24 or 25 °C) as a commonly used indicator of metabolic performance. In addition, the mitochondria within permeabilised skeletal muscle fibres of fish acclimated to a moderate temperature (18 °C Cool acclimation group—CA) and a warm temperature (24 °C. Warm acclimation group—WA) were also tested at 18, 24 and 25 °C in different states of coupling and with different substrates. These two levels of analysis were carried out to test whether any peak in whole animal metabolism reflected the respiratory performance of mitochondria from skeletal muscle representing the bulk of metabolic tissue. While standard metabolic rate (SMR- an indicator of total maintenance metabolism) and maximal metabolic rate ( \(\dot{M}\) O2 max) both generally increased with temperature, aerobic metabolic scope (AMS) was maximal at 24 °C, giving the impression that whole animal (metabolic) performance was optimised at a surprisingly high temperature. Mitochondrial oxygen flux also increased with increasing assay temperature but WA fish showed a lowered response to temperature in high flux states, such as those of oxidative phosphorylation and in chemically uncoupled states of respiration. The thermal stability of mitochondria from WA fish was also noticeably greater than CA fish at 25 °C. However, the predicted contribution of respirational flux to ATP synthesis remained the same in both groups and WA fish showed higher anaerobic activity as a result of high muscle lactate loads in both rested and exhausted states. CA fish had a comparably lower level of resting lactate and took 30 % longer to fatigue than WA fish. Despite some apparent acclimation capacity of skeletal muscle mitochondria, the ATP synthesis capacity of this species is constrained at high temperatures, and that a greater fraction of metabolism in skeletal muscle appears to be supported anaerobically at higher temperatures. The AMS peak at 24 °C does not therefore represent utilisation efficiency of oxygen but, rather, the temperature where scope for oxygen flow is greatest.  相似文献   

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