Desforges Jessica E, Birnie-Gauvin Kim, Jutfelt Fredrik, Gilmour Kathleen M, Eliason Erika J, Dressler Terra L, McKenzie David J, Bates Amanda E, Lawrence Michael J, Fangue Nann, Cooke Steven J
Department of Biology and Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Science, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Ecology, Evolution & Marine Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA.
J Fish Biol. 2023 May;102(5):1000-1016. doi: 10.1111/jfb.15368. Epub 2023 Mar 23.
Critical thermal maxima methodology (CTM) has been used to infer acute upper thermal tolerance in fishes since the 1950s, yet its ecological relevance remains debated. In this study, the authors synthesize evidence to identify methodological concerns and common misconceptions that have limited the interpretation of critical thermal maximum (CT ; value for an individual fish during one trial) in ecological and evolutionary studies of fishes. They identified limitations of, and opportunities for, using CT as a metric in experiments, focusing on rates of thermal ramping, acclimation regimes, thermal safety margins, methodological endpoints, links to performance traits and repeatability. Care must be taken when interpreting CTM in ecological contexts, because the protocol was originally designed for ecotoxicological research with standardized methods to facilitate comparisons within study individuals, across species and contexts. CTM can, however, be used in ecological contexts to predict impacts of environmental warming, but only if parameters influencing thermal limits, such as acclimation temperature or rate of thermal ramping, are taken into account. Applications can include mitigating the effects of climate change, informing infrastructure planning or modelling species distribution, adaptation and/or performance in response to climate-related temperature change. The authors' synthesis points to several key directions for future research that will further aid the application and interpretation of CTM data in ecological contexts.
自20世纪50年代以来,临界热最大值方法(CTM)一直被用于推断鱼类的急性热耐受性上限,但其生态相关性仍存在争议。在本研究中,作者综合证据,以确定在鱼类生态和进化研究中限制对临界热最大值(CT;一次试验中单个鱼类的值)进行解释的方法学问题和常见误解。他们确定了在实验中使用CT作为指标的局限性和机会,重点关注热升温速率、驯化方案、热安全边际、方法学终点、与性能特征的联系以及可重复性。在生态背景下解释CTM时必须谨慎,因为该方案最初是为生态毒理学研究设计的,采用标准化方法以促进研究个体内部、跨物种和不同背景下的比较。然而,只有在考虑到影响热极限的参数(如驯化温度或热升温速率)时,CTM才能用于生态背景中预测环境变暖的影响。其应用可包括减轻气候变化的影响、为基础设施规划提供信息或模拟物种分布、适应和/或响应与气候相关温度变化的性能。作者的综合研究指出了未来研究的几个关键方向,这将进一步有助于在生态背景下应用和解释CTM数据。