Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, 405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden
Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, 405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden.
J Exp Biol. 2021 Mar 22;224(Pt 6):jeb241554. doi: 10.1242/jeb.241554.
Aquatic hypoxia will become increasingly prevalent in the future as a result of eutrophication combined with climate warming. While short-term warming typically constrains fish hypoxia tolerance, many fishes cope with warming by adjusting physiological traits through thermal acclimation. Yet, little is known about how such adjustments affect tolerance to hypoxia. We examined European perch () from the Biotest enclosure (23°C, Biotest population), a unique ∼1 km ecosystem artificially warmed by cooling water from a nuclear power plant, and an adjacent reference site (16-18°C, reference population). Specifically, we evaluated how acute and chronic warming affect routine oxygen consumption rate () and cardiovascular performance in acute hypoxia, alongside assessment of the thermal acclimation of the aerobic contribution to hypoxia tolerance (critical O tension for : ) and absolute hypoxia tolerance (O tension at loss of equilibrium; ). Chronic adjustments (possibly across lifetime or generations) alleviated energetic costs of warming in Biotest perch by depressing and cardiac output, and by increasing blood O carrying capacity relative to reference perch acutely warmed to 23°C. These adjustments were associated with improved maintenance of cardiovascular function and in hypoxia (i.e. reduced ). However, while was only partially thermally compensated in Biotest perch, they had superior absolute hypoxia tolerance (i.e. lowest ) relative to reference perch irrespective of temperature. We show that European perch can thermally adjust physiological traits to safeguard and even improve hypoxia tolerance during chronic environmental warming. This points to cautious optimism that eurythermal fish species may be resilient to the imposition of impaired hypoxia tolerance with climate warming.
由于富营养化与气候变暖相结合,未来水生缺氧现象将越来越普遍。虽然短期变暖通常会限制鱼类对缺氧的耐受能力,但许多鱼类通过热驯化来调整生理特征来应对变暖。然而,对于这些调整如何影响对缺氧的耐受性,我们知之甚少。我们研究了来自 Biotest 围场(23°C,Biotest 种群)的欧洲鲈鱼(),这是一个独特的约 1 公里的生态系统,由核电站的冷却水人为加热,以及一个相邻的参考地点(16-18°C,参考种群)。具体来说,我们评估了急性和慢性变暖如何影响急性缺氧时的常规耗氧率()和心血管性能,以及对缺氧耐受的有氧贡献的热驯化(:的临界 O 张力)和绝对缺氧耐受(失去平衡时的 O 张力;)的评估。慢性调整(可能跨越一生或几代)通过降低和心输出量,以及通过增加血液中 O 的携带能力相对于参考鲈鱼在 23°C 下急性变暖,缓解了 Biotest 鲈鱼变暖的能量成本。这些调整与在缺氧时更好地维持心血管功能和(即降低)有关。然而,尽管 Biotest 鲈鱼的 仅部分受到热补偿,但与参考鲈鱼相比,它们具有优越的绝对缺氧耐受能力(即最低),而与温度无关。我们表明,欧洲鲈鱼可以对生理特征进行热调整,以在慢性环境变暖期间保护甚至提高缺氧耐受能力。这表明,对于耐温鱼类物种可能对因气候变暖而导致的缺氧耐受能力受损具有弹性,我们应该保持谨慎乐观的态度。