Bazin Simon, Hemmer-Brepson Claire, Logez Maxime, Sentis Arnaud, Daufresne Martin
INRAE, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CARRTEL Thonon-les-Bains France.
INRAE, Aix Marseille Univ., RECOVER Aix-en-Provence France.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Nov 23;13(11):e10770. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10770. eCollection 2023 Nov.
Body size shifts in ectotherms are mostly attributed to the Temperature Size Rule (TSR) stating that warming speeds up initial growth rate but leads to smaller size when food does not limit growth. Investigating the links between temperature, growth, and life history traits is key to understand the adaptive value of TSR, which might be context dependent. In particular, global warming can affect food quantity or quality which is another major driver of growth, fecundity, and survival. However, we have limited information on how temperature and food jointly influence life history traits in vertebrate predators and how changes in different life history traits combine to influence fitness and population demography. We investigate (1) whether TSR is maintained under different food conditions, (2) if food exacerbates or dampens the effects of temperature on growth and life history traits and (3) if food influences the adaptive value of TSR. We combine experiments on the medaka with Integral Projection Models to scale from life history traits to fitness consequences. Our results confirm that warming triggers a higher initial growth rate and a lower adult size, reduces generation time and increases mean fitness. A lower level of food exacerbates the effects of warming on growth trajectories. Although lower feeding frequency increased survival and decreased fecundity, it did not influence the effects of warming on fish development rates, fecundity, and survival. In contrast, feeding frequency influenced the adaptive value of TSR, as, under intermittent feeding, generation time decreased faster with warming and the increase in growth rate with warming was weaker compared to continuously fed fish. These results are of importance in the context of global warming as resources are expected to change with increasing temperatures but, surprisingly, our results suggest that feeding frequency have a lower impact on fitness at high temperature.
变温动物的体型变化主要归因于温度-体型规则(TSR),该规则表明,在食物不限制生长的情况下,升温会加快初始生长速度,但会导致体型变小。研究温度、生长和生活史特征之间的联系是理解TSR适应性价值的关键,而TSR的适应性价值可能取决于具体情境。特别是,全球变暖会影响食物的数量或质量,而食物是生长、繁殖力和生存的另一个主要驱动因素。然而,我们对于温度和食物如何共同影响脊椎动物捕食者的生活史特征,以及不同生活史特征的变化如何共同影响适合度和种群统计学的信息有限。我们研究了:(1)在不同食物条件下TSR是否依然成立;(2)食物会加剧还是减弱温度对生长和生活史特征的影响;(3)食物是否会影响TSR的适应性价值。我们将青鳉实验与积分投影模型相结合,以从生活史特征推断出适合度结果。我们的结果证实,升温会引发更高的初始生长速度和更小的成年体型,缩短世代时间并提高平均适合度。较低的食物水平会加剧升温对生长轨迹的影响。虽然较低的投喂频率提高了存活率并降低了繁殖力,但它并未影响升温对鱼类发育速度、繁殖力和存活率的影响。相比之下,投喂频率影响了TSR的适应性价值:在间歇性投喂的情况下,随着温度升高,世代时间的缩短速度更快,而且与持续投喂的鱼类相比,升温时生长速度的增加幅度更小。在全球变暖的背景下,这些结果具有重要意义,因为预计资源会随着温度升高而变化,但令人惊讶的是,我们的结果表明,在高温下投喂频率对适合度的影响较小。