4.6 Article

Sublethal salinity stress contributes to habitat limitation in an endangered estuarine fish

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages 963-981

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.12385

Keywords

anadromous fish; climate change; delta smelt; environmental stress; Hypomesus transpacificus; osmoregulation; transcriptome

Funding

  1. University of California Agricultural Experiment Station [2098-H]
  2. United States Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation [R12AP20018]
  3. California State and Federal Contractors Water Agency [15-13]
  4. California Delta Stewardship Council [201015533]
  5. National Science Foundation Graduate-12 Fellowship Program under DGE [0841297]
  6. California Sea Grant Delta Science Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Fellowships
  7. Bavarian Elite Programme Universitat Bayern e.V. scholarship
  8. TUM Graduate School's Faculty Graduate Center Weihenstephan at Technische Universitat Munchen, Germany

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As global change alters multiple environmental conditions, predicting species' responses can be challenging without understanding how each environmental factor influences organismal performance. Approaches quantifying mechanistic relationships can greatly complement correlative field data, strengthening our abilities to forecast global change impacts. Substantial salinity increases are projected in the San Francisco Estuary, California, due to anthropogenic water diversion and climatic changes, where the critically endangered delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) largely occurs in a low-salinity zone (LSZ), despite their ability to tolerate a much broader salinity range. In this study, we combined molecular and organismal measures to quantify the physiological mechanisms and sublethal responses involved in coping with salinity changes. Delta smelt utilize a suite of conserved molecular mechanisms to rapidly adjust their osmoregulatory physiology in response to salinity changes in estuarine environments. However, these responses can be energetically expensive, and delta smelt body condition was reduced at high salinities. Thus, acclimating to salinities outside the LSZ could impose energetic costs that constrain delta smelt's ability to exploit these habitats. By integrating data across biological levels, we provide key insight into the mechanistic relationships contributing to phenotypic plasticity and distribution limitations and advance the understanding of the molecular osmoregulatory responses in nonmodel estuarine fishes.

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