4.4 Article

Local-scale thermal history influences metabolic response of marine invertebrates to warming

期刊

MARINE BIOLOGY
卷 169, 期 10, 页码 -

出版社

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00227-022-04110-2

关键词

Climate change; Intertidal ecology; Marine invertebrates; Metabolic rate; Thermal history; Thermal sensitivity

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [OCE-1756173]
  2. International Women's Fishing Association Scholarship
  3. National Academy of Sciences Ford Foundation

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The study indicates that climate change affects metabolic rates of marine invertebrates, driven by thermal history. Differences in thermal sensitivity and relationships between thermal history and responses were observed between species and seasons, particularly within short time periods.
As climate change continues, anticipating species' responses to rising temperatures requires an understanding of the drivers of thermal sensitivity, which itself may vary over space and time. We measured metabolic rates of three representative marine invertebrate species (hermit crabs Pagurus hirsutiusculus, periwinkle snails Littorina sitkana, and mussels Mytilus trossulus) and evaluated the relationship between thermal sensitivity (Q(10)) and thermal history. We tested the hypothesis that thermal history drives thermal sensitivity and quantified how this relationship differs over time (short-term to seasonal time scales) and between species. Organisms were collected from tide pools in Sitka, Alaska where we also recorded temperatures to characterize thermal history prior to metabolic rate assays. Using respirometry, we estimated mass-specific oxygen consumption (MO2) at ambient and increased temperatures for one individual per species per tide pool across three seasons. We evaluated relationships between thermal sensitivity and pool temperatures for time periods ranging from 1 day to 1 month prior to collection. For all species, thermal sensitivity was related to thermal history for the shorter time periods (1 day to 1 week). However, the direction of the relationships and most important thermal parameters (i.e., maximum, mean, or range) differed between species and seasons. We found that on average, P. hirsutiusculus and L. sitkana were more thermally sensitive than M. trossulus. These findings show that variability in thermal history over small spatial scales influences individuals' metabolic response to warming and may be indicative of these species' ability to acclimate to future climate change.

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