Smaller body size under warming is not due to gill-oxygen limitation in a cold-water salmonid

Author:

Lonthair Joshua K.12ORCID,Wegner Nicholas C.3ORCID,Cheng Brian S.1ORCID,Fangue Nann A.4ORCID,O'Donnell Matthew J.5ORCID,Regish Amy M.5ORCID,Swenson John D.1ORCID,Argueta Estefany1ORCID,McCormick Stephen D.51ORCID,Letcher Benjamin H.5ORCID,Komoroske Lisa M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Massachusetts Amherst 1 Department of Environmental Conservation , , Amherst, MA 01003-9285 , USA

2. National Research Council under contract to Fisheries Resources Division, Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 2 , La Jolla, CA 92037-1508 , USA

3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 3 Fisheries Resources Division , , La Jolla 92037-1508, CA , USA

4. University of California, Davis 4 Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology , , Davis, CA 95616 , USA

5. US Geological Survey, Eastern Ecological Science Center at the S. O. Conte Research Laboratory 5 , Turners Falls, MA 01376-1000 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Declining body size in fishes and other aquatic ectotherms associated with anthropogenic climate warming has significant implications for future fisheries yields, stock assessments and aquatic ecosystem stability. One proposed mechanism seeking to explain such body-size reductions, known as the gill oxygen limitation (GOL) hypothesis, has recently been used to model future impacts of climate warming on fisheries but has not been robustly empirically tested. We used brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), a fast-growing, cold-water salmonid species of broad economic, conservation and ecological value, to examine the GOL hypothesis in a long-term experiment quantifying effects of temperature on growth, resting metabolic rate (RMR), maximum metabolic rate (MMR) and gill surface area (GSA). Despite significantly reduced growth and body size at an elevated temperature, allometric slopes of GSA were not significantly different than 1.0 and were above those for RMR and MMR at both temperature treatments (15°C and 20°C), contrary to GOL expectations. We also found that the effect of temperature on RMR was time-dependent, contradicting the prediction that heightened temperatures increase metabolic rates and reinforcing the importance of longer-term exposures (e.g. >6 months) to fully understand the influence of acclimation on temperature–metabolic rate relationships. Our results indicate that although oxygen limitation may be important in some aspects of temperature–body size relationships and constraints on metabolic supply may contribute to reduced growth in some cases, it is unlikely that GOL is a universal mechanism explaining temperature–body size relationships in aquatic ectotherms. We suggest future research focus on alternative mechanisms underlying temperature–body size relationships, and that projections of climate change impacts on fisheries yields using models based on GOL assumptions be interpreted with caution.

Funder

California Ocean Protection Council

National Science Foundation

UMass Amherst

UC Agricultural Experiment Station

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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