4.5 Article

Developmental thermal plasticity of prey modifies the impact of predation

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 218, Issue 9, Pages 1402-1409

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.116558

Keywords

Acclimation; Climate change; Fish; Locomotor performance; Species interactions; Survivorship; Tadpoles

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. Australian International Postgraduate Research Scholarship

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Environmental conditions during embryonic development can influence the mean expression of phenotypes as well as phenotypic responses to environmental change later in life. The resulting phenotypes may be better matched to their environment and more resilient to environmental change, including human-induced climate change. However, whether plasticity does improve success in an ecological context is unresolved. In a microcosm experiment, we show that developmental plasticity in embryos of the frog Limnodynastes peronii is beneficial by increasing survivorship of tadpoles in the presence of predators when egg incubation (15 or 25 degrees C) and tadpole acclimation temperature inmicrocosms(15 or 25 degrees C) coincided at 15 degrees C. Tadpoles that survived predation were smaller, and had faster burst swimming speeds than those kept in no-predator control conditions, but only at high (25 degrees C) egg incubation or subsequent microcosm temperatures. Metabolic rates were determined by a three-way interaction between incubation and microcosm temperatures and predation; maximal glycolytic and mitochondrial metabolic capacities (enzyme activities) were lower in survivors from predation compared with controls, particularly when eggs were incubated at 25 degrees C. We show that thermal conditions experienced during early development are ecologically relevant by modulating survivorship from predation. Importantly, developmental thermal plasticity also impacts population phenotypes indirectly by modifying species interactions and the selection pressure imposed by predation.

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