Department of Aquatic Resources, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Öregrund, Sweden.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Jul;25(7):2285-2295. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14637. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
A challenge facing ecologists trying to predict responses to climate change is the few recent analogous conditions to use for comparison. For example, negative relationships between ectotherm body size and temperature are common both across natural thermal gradients and in small-scale experiments. However, it is unknown if short-term body size responses are representative of long-term responses. Moreover, to understand population responses to warming, we must recognize that individual responses to temperature may vary over ontogeny. To enable predictions of how climate warming may affect natural populations, we therefore ask how body size and growth may shift in response to increased temperature over life history, and whether short- and long-term growth responses differ. We addressed these questions using a unique setup with multidecadal artificial heating of an enclosed coastal bay in the Baltic Sea and an adjacent reference area (both with unexploited populations), using before-after control-impact paired time-series analyses. We assembled individual growth trajectories of ~13,000 unique individuals of Eurasian perch and found that body growth increased substantially after warming, but the extent depended on body size: Only among small-bodied perch did growth increase with temperature. Moreover, the strength of this response gradually increased over the 24 year warming period. Our study offers a unique example of how warming can affect fish populations over multiple generations, resulting in gradual changes in body growth, varying as organisms develop. Although increased juvenile growth rates are in line with predictions of the temperature-size rule, the fact that a larger body size at age was maintained over life history contrasts to that same rule. Because the artificially heated area is a contemporary system mimicking a warmer sea, our findings can aid predictions of fish responses to further warming, taking into account that growth responses may vary both over an individual's life history and over time.
生态学家在试图预测气候变化的反应时面临的一个挑战是,可供比较的近期类似条件很少。例如,变温动物的体型与温度之间的负相关关系在自然热梯度和小规模实验中都很常见。然而,目前还不清楚短期的体型反应是否代表长期的反应。此外,为了了解种群对变暖的反应,我们必须认识到,个体对温度的反应可能在个体发育过程中有所不同。为了能够预测气候变暖如何影响自然种群,我们因此询问,随着生命史中温度的升高,体型和生长会如何发生变化,以及短期和长期的生长反应是否不同。我们使用一种独特的设置来解决这些问题,即在波罗的海的一个封闭沿海湾进行了多十年的人工加热,以及相邻的一个对照区域(两个区域都有未开发的种群),使用前后对照控制影响的时间序列分析。我们组装了约 13000 个欧亚鲈鱼个体的个体生长轨迹,发现体生长在变暖后显著增加,但程度取决于体型:只有在小体型鲈鱼中,生长才随温度增加。此外,这种反应的强度在 24 年的变暖期内逐渐增强。我们的研究提供了一个独特的例子,说明变暖如何影响鱼类种群,导致身体生长逐渐变化,随着生物的发育而变化。尽管幼鱼生长率的增加符合温度-体型规则的预测,但在整个生命史中保持较大体型的事实与该规则相反。由于人工加热区域是一个模拟更温暖海洋的当代系统,我们的发现可以帮助预测鱼类对进一步变暖的反应,同时考虑到生长反应可能在个体的生命史和随时间而变化。