Aquatic species living in productive coastal habitats with abundant primary producers have evolved in highly dynamic diel and seasonally fluctuating environments in terms of, for example, water temperature and dissolved oxygen. However, how environmental fluctuations shape the thermal tolerance of marine species is still poorly understood. Here we hypothesize that the degree of predictability of the diel environmental fluctuations in the coastal area can explain the thermal response of marine species. To test this hypothesis, we measured the thermal tolerance of 17 species of marine ectotherm from tropical, warm temperate and cold temperate latitudes under two levels of oxygen (around saturation and at supersaturation), and relate the results to their site-specific temperature and oxygen fluctuation and their environmental predictability. We demonstrate that oxygen and temperature fluctuations at tropical latitudes have a higher predictability than those at warm and cold temperate latitudes. Further, we show that marine species that are adapted to high predictability have the potential to tune their thermal performance when exposed to oxygen supersaturation, despite being constrained within a narrow safety margin. We advocate that the predictability of the environmental fluctuation needs to be considered when measuring and forecasting the response of marine animals to global warming.

Fusi, M., Barausse, A., Booth, J., Chapman, E., Daffonchio, D., Sanderson, W., et al. (2024). The predictability of fluctuating environments shapes the thermal tolerance of marine ectotherms and compensates narrow safety margins. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 14(1) [10.1038/s41598-024-77621-1].

The predictability of fluctuating environments shapes the thermal tolerance of marine ectotherms and compensates narrow safety margins

Giomi, F
2024-01-01

Abstract

Aquatic species living in productive coastal habitats with abundant primary producers have evolved in highly dynamic diel and seasonally fluctuating environments in terms of, for example, water temperature and dissolved oxygen. However, how environmental fluctuations shape the thermal tolerance of marine species is still poorly understood. Here we hypothesize that the degree of predictability of the diel environmental fluctuations in the coastal area can explain the thermal response of marine species. To test this hypothesis, we measured the thermal tolerance of 17 species of marine ectotherm from tropical, warm temperate and cold temperate latitudes under two levels of oxygen (around saturation and at supersaturation), and relate the results to their site-specific temperature and oxygen fluctuation and their environmental predictability. We demonstrate that oxygen and temperature fluctuations at tropical latitudes have a higher predictability than those at warm and cold temperate latitudes. Further, we show that marine species that are adapted to high predictability have the potential to tune their thermal performance when exposed to oxygen supersaturation, despite being constrained within a narrow safety margin. We advocate that the predictability of the environmental fluctuation needs to be considered when measuring and forecasting the response of marine animals to global warming.
2024
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore BIOS-05/A - Ecologia
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Biogeography
Circadian cycle
Climate sensitivity
Macro-physiology
Phenotypic plasticity
Fusi, M., Barausse, A., Booth, J., Chapman, E., Daffonchio, D., Sanderson, W., et al. (2024). The predictability of fluctuating environments shapes the thermal tolerance of marine ectotherms and compensates narrow safety margins. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 14(1) [10.1038/s41598-024-77621-1].
Fusi, M; Barausse, A; Booth, J; Chapman, E; Daffonchio, D; Sanderson, W; Diele, K; Giomi, F
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/394809
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