Lee Abigail H, Eme John, Mueller Casey A, Manzon Richard G, Somers Christopher M, Boreham Douglas R, Wilson Joanna Y
Department of Biology, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. West, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada.
Department of Biological Sciences, California State University San Marcos, 333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Rd., San Marcos, CA 92096, USA.
J Therm Biol. 2016 Apr;57:11-20. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2016.01.010. Epub 2016 Feb 27.
Increasing incubation temperatures, caused by global climate change or thermal effluent from industrial processes, may influence embryonic development of fish. This study investigates the cumulative effects of increased incubation temperature and repeated heat shocks on developing Lake Whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) embryos. We studied the effects of three constant incubation temperatures (2°C, 5°C or 8°C water) and weekly, 1-h heat shocks (+3°C) on hatching time, survival and morphology of embryos, as these endpoints may be particularly susceptible to temperature changes. The constant temperatures represent the predicted magnitude of elevated water temperatures from climate change and industrial thermal plumes. Time to the pre-hatch stage decreased as constant incubation temperature increased (148d at 2°C, 92d at 5°C, 50d at 8°C), but weekly heat shocks did not affect time to hatch. Mean survival rates and embryo morphometrics were compared at specific developmental time-points (blastopore, eyed, fin flutter and pre-hatch) across all treatments. Constant incubation temperatures or +3°C heat-shock exposures did not significantly alter cumulative survival percentage (~50% cumulative survival to pre-hatch stage). Constant warm incubation temperatures did result in differences in morphology in pre-hatch stage embryos. 8°C and 5°C embryos were significantly smaller and had larger yolks than 2°C embryos, but heat-shocked embryos did not differ from their respective constant temperature treatment groups. Elevated incubation temperatures may adversely alter Lake Whitefish embryo size at hatch, but weekly 1-h heat shocks did not affect size or survival at hatch. These results suggest that intermittent bouts of warm water effluent (e.g., variable industrial emissions) are less likely to negatively affect Lake Whitefish embryonic development than warmer constant incubation temperatures that may occur due to climate change.
全球气候变化或工业生产过程中的热排放导致的孵化温度升高,可能会影响鱼类的胚胎发育。本研究调查了孵化温度升高和反复热激对发育中的湖白鲑(Coregonus clupeaformis)胚胎的累积影响。我们研究了三种恒定孵化温度(2°C、5°C或8°C水温)以及每周一次、持续1小时的热激(+3°C)对胚胎孵化时间、存活率和形态的影响,因为这些指标可能对温度变化特别敏感。这些恒定温度代表了气候变化和工业热羽流导致的水温升高的预测幅度。随着恒定孵化温度的升高,孵化前阶段的时间缩短(2°C时为148天,5°C时为92天,8°C时为50天),但每周的热激并未影响孵化时间。在所有处理的特定发育时间点(胚孔期、眼点期、鳍摆动期和孵化前期)比较了平均存活率和胚胎形态指标。恒定孵化温度或+3°C热激暴露并未显著改变累积存活率(孵化前期的累积存活率约为50%)。恒定的温暖孵化温度确实导致了孵化前期胚胎形态的差异。8°C和5°C的胚胎明显比2°C的胚胎小,且卵黄更大,但热激胚胎与各自的恒定温度处理组没有差异。升高的孵化温度可能会对湖白鲑孵化时的胚胎大小产生不利影响,但每周1小时的热激并未影响孵化时的大小或存活率。这些结果表明,间歇性的温水排放(例如,工业排放变化)比气候变化可能导致的较温暖的恒定孵化温度更不太可能对湖白鲑胚胎发育产生负面影响。