4.5 Article

Master of all trades: thermal acclimation and adaptation of cardiac function in a broadly distributed marine invasive species, the European green crab, Carcinus maenas

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue 7, Pages 1129-1138

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.093849

Keywords

Acclimatory plasticity; Cardiac physiology; Local adaptation; Species invasion; Thermal tolerance

Categories

Funding

  1. Interdisciplinary Study of Coastal Oceans (PISCO)
  2. Myers Trust
  3. Explorer's Club Exploration Fund
  4. Lerner Gray Memorial Fund of the American Museum of Natural History
  5. Vice Provost for Graduate Education at Stanford
  6. Eugene C. and Aileen E. Haderlie Memorial Fund
  7. National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant [1210057]
  8. National Defense Science and Engineering
  9. Jr Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  10. Division Of Environmental Biology
  11. Direct For Biological Sciences [1210057] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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As global warming accelerates, there is increasing concern about how ecosystems may change as a result of species loss and replacement. Here, we examined the thermal physiology of the European green crab (Carcinus maenas Linnaeus 1758), a globally invasive species, along three parallel thermal gradients in its native and invasive ranges. At each site, we assessed cardiac physiology to determine heat and cold tolerance and acclimatory plasticity. We found that, overall, the species is highly tolerant of both heat and cold, and that it survives higher temperatures than co-occurring native marine crustaceans. Further, we found that both heat and cold tolerance are plastic in response to short-term acclimation (18-31 days at either 5 or 25 degrees C). Comparing patterns within ranges, we found latitudinal gradients in thermal tolerance in the native European range and in the invasive range in eastern North America. This pattern is strongest in the native range, and likely evolved there. Because of a complicated invasion history, the latitudinal pattern in the eastern North American invasive range may be due either to rapid adaptation post-invasion or to adaptive differences between the ancestral populations that founded the invasion. Overall, the broad thermal tolerance ranges of green crabs, which may facilitate invasion of novel habitats, derive from high inherent eurythermality and acclimatory plasticity and potentially adaptive differentiation among populations. The highly flexible physiology that results from these capacities may represent the hallmark of a successful invasive species, and may provide a model for success in a changing world.

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