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Chronic exposure to environmental temperature attenuates the thermal sensitivity of salmonids

Abstract: Metabolism, the biological processing of energy and materials, scales predictably with temperature and body size. Temperature effects on metabolism are normally studied via acute exposures, which overlooks the capacity for organisms to moderate their metabolism following chronic exposure to warming. Here, we conduct respirometry assays in situ and after transplanting salmonid fish among different streams to disentangle the effects of chronic and acute thermal exposure. We find a clear temperature dependence of metabolism for the transplants, but not the in-situ assays, indicating that chronic exposure to warming can attenuate salmonid thermal sensitivity. A bioenergetic model accurately captures the presence of fish in warmer streams when accounting for chronic exposure, whereas it incorrectly predicts their local extinction with warming when incorporating the acute temperature dependence of metabolism. This highlights the need to incorporate the potential for thermal acclimation or adaptation when forecasting the consequences of global warming on ecosystems.

Other publications of the same journal or congress with authors from the University of Cantabria

 Fuente: Nature Communications, 2023, 14, 8309

Publisher: Nature Publishing Group

 Publication date: 14/12/2023

No. of pages: 10

Publication type: Article

 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-43478-7

ISSN: 2041-1723

 Spanish project: PID2019-107085RB-I00

Publication Url: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-43478-7#Ack1

Authorship

PENELOPE S. A.BLYTH,

HAWKSLEY, JACK

KINSELLA, HUGH

LAURIDSEN, RASMUS

MORRIS, OLIVIA F.

FRANCISCO JESUS PEÑAS SILVA

THOMAS, GARETH E.

WOODWARD, GUY

ZHAO, LEI

O`GORMAN, EOIN J.