Metabolic rate and climate change across latitudes: evidence of mass-dependent responses in aquatic amphipods

Author:

Shokri Milad12ORCID,Cozzoli Francesco123ORCID,Vignes Fabio12ORCID,Bertoli Marco4ORCID,Pizzul Elisabetta4ORCID,Basset Alberto125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Ecology 1 , Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Technologies , , S.P. Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce , Italy

2. University of Salento 1 , Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences and Technologies , , S.P. Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce , Italy

3. Research Institute on Terrestrial Ecosystems (IRET–URT Lecce), National Research Council of Italy (CNR) 2 , Campus Ecotekne, S.P. Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce , Italy

4. University of Trieste 3 Department of Life Science , , Via Giorgieri 10, 34127 Trieste , Italy

5. 4 National Biodiversity Future Center, Palermo 90133, Italy

Abstract

ABSTRACT Predictions of individual responses to climate change are often based on the assumption that temperature affects the metabolism of individuals independently of their body mass. However, empirical evidence indicates that interactive effects exist. Here, we investigated the response of individual standard metabolic rate (SMR) to annual temperature range and forecasted temperature rises of 0.6–1.2°C above the current maxima, under the conservative climate change scenario IPCC RCP2.6. As a model organism, we used the amphipod Gammarus insensibilis, collected across latitudes along the western coast of the Adriatic Sea down to the southernmost limit of the species' distributional range, with individuals varying in body mass (0.4–13.57 mg). Overall, we found that the effect of temperature on SMR is mass dependent. Within the annual temperature range, the mass-specific SMR of small/young individuals increased with temperature at a greater rate (activation energy: E=0.48 eV) than large/old individuals (E=0.29 eV), with a higher metabolic level for high-latitude than low-latitude populations. However, under the forecasted climate conditions, the mass-specific SMR of large individuals responded differently across latitudes. Unlike the higher-latitude population, whose mass-specific SMR increased in response to the forecasted climate change across all size classes, in the lower-latitude populations, this increase was not seen in large individuals. The larger/older conspecifics at lower latitudes could therefore be the first to experience the negative impacts of warming on metabolism-related processes. Although the ecological collapse of such a basic trophic level (aquatic amphipods) owing to climate change would have profound consequences for population ecology, the risk is significantly mitigated by phenotypic and genotypic adaptation.

Funder

Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca

Universita del Salento

Interreg CASCADE

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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