Department of Marine Science, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX 78373, United States; Department of Biological Sciences, Idaho State University, Pocatello, ID 83209, United States.
Department of Marine Science, University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas, TX 78373, United States.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 Apr 20;922:171057. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171057. Epub 2024 Feb 18.
Ocean warming is a prevailing threat to marine ectotherms. Recently the "plastic floors, concrete ceilings" hypothesis was proposed, which suggests that a warmed fish will acclimate to higher temperatures by reducing standard metabolic rate (SMR) while keeping maximum metabolic rate (MMR) stable, therefore improving aerobic scope (AS). Here we evaluated this hypothesis on red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) while incorporating measures of hypoxia vulnerability (critical oxygen threshold; P) and mitochondrial performance. Fish were subjected to a 12-week acclimation to 20 °C or 28 °C. Respirometry was performed every 4 weeks to obtain metabolic rate and P; mitochondrial respirometry was performed on liver and heart samples at the end of the acclimation. 28 °C fish had a significantly higher SMR, MMR, and P than 20 °C controls at time 0, but SMR declined by 36.2 % over the 12-week acclimation. No change in SMR was observed in the control treatment. Contrary to expectations, SMR suppression did not improve AS relative to time 0 owing to a progressive decline in MMR over acclimation time. P decreased by 27.2 % in the warm-acclimated fishes, which resulted in temperature treatments having statistically similar values by 12-weeks. No differences in mitochondrial traits were observed in the heart - despite a Δ8 °C assay temperature - while liver respiratory and coupling control ratios were significantly improved, suggesting that mitochondrial plasticity may contribute to the reduced SMR with warming. Overall, this work suggests that warming induced metabolic suppression offsets the deleterious consequences of high oxygen demand on hypoxia vulnerability, and in so doing greatly expands the theoretical range of metabolically available habitats for red drum.
海洋变暖是海洋变温动物面临的主要威胁。最近提出了“塑料地板,混凝土天花板”假说,该假说认为,变暖的鱼类会通过降低标准代谢率(SMR)来适应更高的温度,同时保持最大代谢率(MMR)稳定,从而提高有氧范围(AS)。在这里,我们评估了红鼓鱼(Sciaenops ocellatus)对该假说的适应性,同时纳入了缺氧易感性(临界氧阈值;P)和线粒体性能的测量。鱼在 20°C 或 28°C 下进行了 12 周的适应期。每 4 周进行一次呼吸测量以获得代谢率和 P;在适应期结束时,对肝脏和心脏样本进行线粒体呼吸测量。28°C 的鱼在 0 时刻的 SMR、MMR 和 P 明显高于 20°C 的对照组,但在 12 周的适应期内,SMR 下降了 36.2%。对照组的 SMR 没有变化。与预期相反,由于 MMR 在适应期内逐渐下降,SMR 抑制并没有使 AS 相对于 0 时刻得到改善。在暖适应鱼类中,P 下降了 27.2%,这使得 12 周时的温度处理具有统计学上相似的值。尽管心脏的检测温度相差 8°C,但在心脏中没有观察到线粒体特征的差异-而肝脏呼吸和耦合控制比则有显著改善,这表明线粒体可塑性可能有助于随着温度升高而降低 SMR。总的来说,这项工作表明,变暖引起的代谢抑制抵消了高耗氧对缺氧易感性的有害影响,从而极大地扩大了红鼓鱼代谢可利用栖息地的理论范围。