Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, Devon, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011;6(7):e22610. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022610. Epub 2011 Jul 27.
Thermal limits may arise through a mismatch between oxygen supply and demand in a range of animal taxa. Whilst this oxygen limitation hypothesis is supported by data from a range of marine fish and invertebrates, its generality remains contentious. In particular, it is unclear whether oxygen limitation determines thermal extremes in tracheated arthropods, where oxygen limitation may be unlikely due to the efficiency and plasticity of tracheal systems in supplying oxygen directly to metabolically active tissues. Although terrestrial taxa with open tracheal systems may not be prone to oxygen limitation, species may be affected during other life-history stages, particularly if these rely on diffusion into closed tracheal systems. Furthermore, a central role for oxygen limitation in insects is envisaged within a parallel line of research focussing on insect gigantism in the late Palaeozoic.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we examine thermal maxima in the aquatic life stages of an insect at normoxia, hypoxia (14 kPa) and hyperoxia (36 kPa). We demonstrate that upper thermal limits do indeed respond to external oxygen supply in the aquatic life stages of the stonefly Dinocras cephalotes, suggesting that the critical thermal limits of such aquatic larvae are set by oxygen limitation. This could result from impeded oxygen delivery, or limited oxygen regulatory capacity, both of which have implications for our understanding of the limits to insect body size and how these are influenced by atmospheric oxygen levels.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings extend the generality of the hypothesis of oxygen limitation of thermal tolerance, suggest that oxygen constraints on body size may be stronger in aquatic environments, and that oxygen toxicity may have actively selected for gigantism in the aquatic stages of Carboniferous arthropods.
在一系列动物类群中,氧气供应与需求不匹配可能会导致热极限。虽然这一氧气限制假说得到了来自一系列海洋鱼类和无脊椎动物的数据支持,但它的普遍性仍然存在争议。特别是,氧气限制是否决定了有气管节肢动物的热极限还不清楚,在有气管节肢动物中,由于气管系统供氧的效率和可塑性,氧气限制可能不太可能发生,直接向代谢活跃的组织供氧。尽管具有开放气管系统的陆地生物可能不容易受到氧气限制的影响,但物种可能会在其他生命史阶段受到影响,特别是如果这些阶段依赖于扩散到封闭的气管系统。此外,在研究昆虫巨型化的平行研究中,氧气限制在昆虫中起着核心作用,这一观点也得到了广泛关注。
方法/主要发现:在这里,我们在正常氧(14 kPa)和缺氧(14 kPa)和高氧(36 kPa)条件下,研究了昆虫水生阶段的热极限。我们证明,石蝇 Dinocras cephalotes 的水生阶段的热极限确实会受到外部氧气供应的影响,这表明这些水生幼虫的临界热极限受到氧气限制的影响。这可能是由于氧气输送受阻,或者是氧气调节能力有限,这两种情况都对我们理解昆虫体型的限制以及大气氧气水平如何影响这些限制产生了影响。
结论/意义:这些发现扩展了氧气限制热耐受性假说的普遍性,表明在水生环境中,氧气对体型的限制可能更强,氧气毒性可能积极地选择了石炭纪节肢动物水生阶段的巨型化。