Poletto Jamilynn B, Cocherell Dennis E, Baird Sarah E, Nguyen Trinh X, Cabrera-Stagno Valentina, Farrell Anthony P, Fangue Nann A
Department of Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology , University of California , Davis, CA 95616 , USA.
United States Environmental Protection Agency , Region 9, 75 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA.
Conserv Physiol. 2017 Jan 4;5(1):cow067. doi: 10.1093/conphys/cow067. eCollection 2017.
Understanding how the current warming trends affect fish populations is crucial for effective conservation and management. To help define suitable thermal habitat for juvenile Chinook salmon, the thermal performance of juvenile Chinook salmon acclimated to either 15 or 19°C was tested across a range of environmentally relevant acute temperature changes (from 12 to 26°C). Swim tunnel respirometers were used to measure routine oxygen uptake as a measure of routine metabolic rate (RMR) and oxygen uptake when swimming maximally as a measure of maximal metabolic rate (MMR) at each test temperature. We estimated absolute aerobic scope (AAS = MMR - RMR), the capacity to supply oxygen beyond routine needs, as well as factorial aerobic scope (FAS = MMR/RMR). All fish swam at a test temperature of 23°C regardless of acclimation temperature, but some mortality occurred at 25°C during MMR measurements. Overall, RMR and MMR increased with acute warming, but aerobic capacity was unaffected by test temperatures up to 23°C in both acclimation groups. The mean AAS for fish acclimated and tested at 15°C (7.06 ± 1.76 mg O kg h) was similar to that measured for fish acclimated and tested at 19°C (8.80 ± 1.42 mg O kg h). Over the entire acute test temperature range, while MMR and AAS were similar for the two acclimation groups, RMR was significantly lower and FAS consequently higher at the lower test temperatures for the fish acclimated at 19°C. Thus, this stock of juvenile Chinook salmon shows an impressive aerobic capacity when acutely warmed to temperatures close to their upper thermal tolerance limit, regardless of the acclimation temperature. These results are compared with those for other salmonids, and the implications of our findings for informing management actions are discussed.
了解当前的变暖趋势如何影响鱼类种群对于有效的保护和管理至关重要。为了帮助确定适合奇努克鲑幼鱼的热栖息地,对适应15或19°C的奇努克鲑幼鱼在一系列与环境相关的急性温度变化(从12到26°C)下的热性能进行了测试。使用游泳隧道呼吸仪测量常规氧气摄取量,作为常规代谢率(RMR)的指标,并测量在每个测试温度下最大游泳时的氧气摄取量,作为最大代谢率(MMR)的指标。我们估计了绝对有氧范围(AAS = MMR - RMR),即供应超出常规需求的氧气的能力,以及系数有氧范围(FAS = MMR/RMR)。无论驯化温度如何,所有鱼类在23°C的测试温度下都能游泳,但在MMR测量期间,25°C时出现了一些死亡情况。总体而言,RMR和MMR随着急性变暖而增加,但在两个驯化组中,高达23°C的测试温度对有氧能力没有影响。在15°C下驯化和测试的鱼类的平均AAS(7.06±1.76毫克O kg h)与在19°C下驯化和测试的鱼类的测量值(8.80±1.42毫克O kg h)相似。在整个急性测试温度范围内,虽然两个驯化组的MMR和AAS相似,但在较低测试温度下,适应19°C的鱼类的RMR显著较低,因此FAS较高。因此,无论驯化温度如何,当急性升温至接近其热耐受上限温度时,这批奇努克鲑幼鱼显示出令人印象深刻的有氧能力。将这些结果与其他鲑科鱼类的结果进行了比较,并讨论了我们的发现对指导管理行动的意义。