Crispin Taryn S, White Craig R
School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2013 Jul-Aug;86(4):470-81. doi: 10.1086/671329. Epub 2013 Jun 7.
Changes to an animal's abiotic environment-and consequent changes in the allometry of metabolic rate in the whole animal and its constituent parts-has considerable potential to reveal important patterns in both intraspecific and interindividual variation of metabolic rates. This study demonstrates that, after 6 wk of thermal acclimation at replicate treatments of 16°, 21°, and 25°C, standard metabolic rate (SMR) scales allometrically in Leichhardtian river prawns Macrobrachium tolmerum ([Formula: see text]) and that the scaling exponent and normalization constant of the relationship between SMR and body mass is not significantly different among acclimation treatments when measured at 21°C. There is, however, significant variation among individuals in whole-animal metabolic rate. We hypothesized that these observations may arise because of changes in the metabolic rate and allometry of metabolic rate or mass of organ tissues within the animal. To investigate this hypothesis, rates of oxygen consumption in a range of tissues (gills, gonads, hepatopancreas, chelae muscle, tail muscle) were measured at 21°C and related to the body mass (M) and whole-animal SMR of individual prawns. We demonstrate that thermal acclimation had no effect on organ and tissue mass, that most organ and tissue (gills, gonads, hepatopancreas) respiration rates do not change with acclimation temperature, and that residual variation in the allometry of M. tolmerum SMR is not explained by differences in organ and tissue mass and respiration rates. These results suggest that body size and ambient temperature may independently affect metabolic rate in this species. Both chelae and tail muscle, however, exhibited a reduction in respiration rate in animals acclimated to 25° relative to those acclimated to 16° and 21°C. This reduction in respiration rates of muscle at higher temperatures is evidence of a tissue-specific acclimation response that was not detectable at the whole-animal level.
动物非生物环境的变化以及随之而来的整个动物及其组成部分代谢率异速生长的变化,具有揭示代谢率种内和个体间变异重要模式的巨大潜力。本研究表明,在16°C、21°C和25°C的重复处理下进行6周的热驯化后,莱氏沼虾(Macrobrachium tolmerum)的标准代谢率(SMR)呈异速生长,并且在21°C测量时,不同驯化处理间SMR与体重关系的缩放指数和归一化常数无显著差异。然而,个体间的全动物代谢率存在显著差异。我们推测,这些观察结果可能是由于动物体内代谢率、代谢率异速生长或器官组织质量的变化所致。为了验证这一假设,在21°C下测量了一系列组织(鳃、性腺、肝胰腺、螯肌、尾肌)的耗氧率,并将其与个体虾的体重(M)和全动物SMR相关联。我们证明,热驯化对器官和组织质量没有影响,大多数器官和组织(鳃、性腺、肝胰腺)的呼吸率不会随驯化温度而变化,并且莱氏沼虾SMR异速生长的剩余变异不能用器官和组织质量及呼吸率的差异来解释。这些结果表明,体型和环境温度可能独立影响该物种的代谢率。然而,相对于适应16°C和21°C的动物,适应25°C的动物的螯肌和尾肌呼吸率均有所降低。较高温度下肌肉呼吸率的降低是一种在全动物水平上无法检测到的组织特异性驯化反应的证据。