Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, 4811, Australia.
Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, 4811, Australia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2017 Jun;23(6):2230-2240. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13552. Epub 2016 Dec 13.
Global warming is expected to reduce body sizes of ectothermic animals. Although the underlying mechanisms of size reductions remain poorly understood, effects appear stronger at latitudinal extremes (poles and tropics) and in aquatic rather than terrestrial systems. To shed light on this phenomenon, we examined the size dependence of critical thermal maxima (CTmax) and aerobic metabolism in a commercially important tropical reef fish, the leopard coral grouper (Plectropomus leopardus) following acclimation to current-day (28.5 °C) vs. projected end-of-century (33 °C) summer temperatures for the northern Great Barrier Reef (GBR). CTmax declined from 38.3 to 37.5 °C with increasing body mass in adult fish (0.45-2.82 kg), indicating that larger individuals are more thermally sensitive than smaller conspecifics. This may be explained by a restricted capacity for large fish to increase mass-specific maximum metabolic rate (MMR) at 33 °C compared with 28.5 °C. Indeed, temperature influenced the relationship between metabolism and body mass (0.02-2.38 kg), whereby the scaling exponent for MMR increased from 0.74 ± 0.02 at 28.5 °C to 0.79 ± 0.01 at 33 °C, and the corresponding exponents for standard metabolic rate (SMR) were 0.75 ± 0.04 and 0.80 ± 0.03. The increase in metabolic scaling exponents at higher temperatures suggests that energy budgets may be disproportionately impacted in larger fish and contribute to reduced maximum adult size. Such climate-induced reductions in body size would have important ramifications for fisheries productivity, but are also likely to have knock-on effects for trophodynamics and functioning of ecosystems.
全球变暖预计会降低变温动物的体型。虽然体型减小的潜在机制仍未被充分理解,但这种效应在纬度极值(两极和热带地区)和水生系统中比在陆地系统中更为明显。为了阐明这一现象,我们研究了在适应当前(28.5°C)和预计本世纪末(33°C)夏季温度后,商业上重要的热带珊瑚礁鱼豹纹石斑鱼(Plectropomus leopardus)的临界热最大值(CTmax)和有氧代谢与体型大小的关系。成年鱼(0.45-2.82 公斤)的 CTmax 随体重增加从 38.3°C 降至 37.5°C,表明较大的个体比同类的较小个体对温度更敏感。这可能是由于与 28.5°C 相比,较大的鱼在 33°C 下增加比特定最大代谢率(MMR)的能力受到限制。事实上,温度影响了代谢与体重之间的关系(0.02-2.38 公斤),其中 MMR 的标度指数从 28.5°C 的 0.74±0.02 增加到 33°C 的 0.79±0.01,而 SMR 的相应指数为 0.75±0.04 和 0.80±0.03。较高温度下代谢标度指数的增加表明,较大的鱼类的能量预算可能会受到不成比例的影响,并导致成年个体最大体型减小。这种由于气候导致的体型减小将对渔业生产力产生重要影响,但也可能对营养动态和生态系统的功能产生连锁反应。