4.7 Article

Can tolerances of multiple stressors and calculated safety margins in fiddler crabs predict responses to extreme environmental conditions resulting from climate change?

期刊

MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN
卷 179, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.113674

关键词

Gelasiminae; Salinity challenge; Temperature; Submersion and desiccation; Predicted climate change; Multiple stressors; Flooding regime

资金

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico, Brazil (CNPq) [303613/2017-3]
  2. Project SEP-CONACYT CB-2017-2018 [A1-S-34563]
  3. [UNAM PAPIIT-IA204922]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We assessed the responses of mangrove crabs to global climate changes and found that more terrestrial species were better adapted to survive in water, while less terrestrial species were more adapted to live on land.
To comprehend mangrove crab responses to predicted global climate changes, we assessed submersion and desiccation survival durations and salinity tolerances and upper thermal limits in fiddler crabs from Isla del Carmen, Yucatan Peninsula. Based on their tolerances of extreme ambient conditions, we also calculated safety margins using abiotic monitoring data. The two most terrestrial species, Minuca rapax and Leptuca panacea, exhibited submersion tolerances of from 22 to 40 h, and desiccation tolerances of from 30 to 55 h; LC50's were approximate to 45 parts per thousand S and UT50's were approximate to 40 degrees C. The two least terrestrial species, M. vocator and L. speciosa, were less tolerant of all experimental challenges, showing submersion and desiccation tolerances of <6 h, and LC50's of 36 parts per thousand S and UT50's of 38 degrees C. While these fiddler crabs inhabit niches closer to their salinity and desiccation/submersion tolerances than to their temperature limits, all are clearly vulnerable to the multiple stressors that accompany anticipated global climate change.

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