The timing of spring warming shapes reproductive effort in a warm-water fish: the role of mismatches between hepatic and gonadal processes

Author:

Fernandes Timothy J.1,Shuter Brian J.23,Ihssen Peter E4,McMeans Bailey C.5

Affiliation:

1. University of Toronto Mississauga, Department of Biology, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada;

2. University of Toronto, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Aquatic Ecosystem Science Section, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada;

4. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Maple, Ontario, Canada, ;

5. University of Toronto - Mississauga, 71637, Biology, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada;

Abstract

Spring-spawning fishes native to northern environments rely on both increasing temperature and lengthening photoperiod to cue reproduction and may thus be particularly sensitive to rapid warming earlier in the year while day lengths remain short. We investigated the reproductive response of pumpkinseed sunfish Lepomis gibbosus to spring warming commencing at a range of day lengths (9 – 15 hours), corresponding to various calendar days (January 10 – May 22). In both the laboratory and field, both male and female fish that experienced early warming while day lengths were <11 hours: 1) failed to initiate reproductive preparation in the liver before gonad development began, and 2) had reduced reproductive allocation. Analysis of published data on temperate fishes suggested that liver development prior to gonad development is widespread across warm-, cool-, and cold-water thermal guilds, though the precise phenology of liver relative to gonad development appears to vary widely among species. Together, our results point toward dampened reproductive preparation as a novel mechanism mediating reduced reproductive output in both warm- and cool-water fish following earlier spring warming.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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