Denny Mark W, Dowd W Wesley
Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University, 120 Ocean View Boulevard, Pacific Grove, CA 93950, USA.
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, 100 Dairy Road, Eastlick G81, Pullman, WA99164, USA.
Integr Org Biol. 2022 Aug 6;4(1):obac037. doi: 10.1093/iob/obac037. eCollection 2022.
Accurate forecasting of organismal responses to climate change requires a deep mechanistic understanding of how physiology responds to present-day variation in the physical environment. However, the road to physiological enlightenment is fraught with complications: predictable environmental fluctuations of any single factor are often accompanied by substantial stochastic variation and rare extreme events, and several factors may interact to affect physiology. Lacking sufficient knowledge of temporal patterns of co-variation in multiple environmental stressors, biologists struggle to design and implement realistic and relevant laboratory experiments. In this study, we directly address these issues, using measurements of the thermal tolerance of freshly collected animals and long-term field records of environmental conditions to explore how the splash-pool copepod adjusts its physiology as its environment changes. Salinity and daily maximum temperature-two dominant environmental stressors experienced by -are extraordinarily variable and unpredictable more than 2-3 days in advance. However, they substantially co-vary such that when temperature is high salinity is also likely to be high. Copepods appear to take advantage of this correlation: median lethal temperature of field-collected copepods increases by 7.5°C over a roughly 120 parts-per-thousand range of ambient salinity. Complementary laboratory experiments show that exposure to a single sublethal thermal event or to an abrupt shift in salinity also elicits rapid augmentation of heat tolerance via physiological plasticity, although the effect of salinity dwarfs that of temperature. These results suggest that 's physiology keeps pace with the rapid, unpredictable fluctuations of its hypervariable physical environment by responding to the cues provided by recent sublethal stress and, more importantly, by leveraging the mechanistic cross-talk between responses to salinity and heat stress.
准确预测生物体对气候变化的反应需要深入了解生理学如何响应当前物理环境的变化。然而,通往生理学认知的道路充满了复杂性:任何单一因素可预测的环境波动往往伴随着大量的随机变化和罕见的极端事件,而且几个因素可能相互作用影响生理学。由于缺乏对多种环境应激源协同变化时间模式的充分了解,生物学家难以设计和实施现实且相关的实验室实验。在本研究中,我们直接解决这些问题,利用对新采集动物的热耐受性测量以及环境条件的长期野外记录,来探索溅水池塘桡足类动物如何随着环境变化调整其生理状态。盐度和每日最高温度(是所经历的两个主要环境应激源)在提前2 - 3天以上时变化异常且不可预测。然而,它们显著地协同变化,以至于当温度高时盐度也可能高。桡足类动物似乎利用了这种相关性:在环境盐度大约120‰的范围内,野外采集的桡足类动物的半数致死温度升高了7.5°C。补充性的实验室实验表明,暴露于单个亚致死热事件或盐度的突然变化也会通过生理可塑性引发耐热性的快速增强,尽管盐度的影响比温度的影响大得多。这些结果表明,通过响应近期亚致死应激提供的线索,更重要的是,通过利用对盐度和热应激反应之间的机制性相互作用,的生理学与其高度可变物理环境的快速、不可预测的波动保持同步。