California's coastal ecosystems are forecasted to undergo shifting ocean conditions due to climate change, some of which may negatively impact recreational and commercial fish populations. To understand if fish populations have the capacity to respond to multiple stressors, it is critical to examine interactive effects across multiple biological scales, from cellular metabolism to species interactions. This study examined the effects of CO(2)-acidification and hypoxia on two naturally co-occurring species, juvenile rockfish (genus Sebastes) and a known predator, cabezon (Scorpaenichthys marmoratus). Fishes were exposed to two PCO(2) levels at two dissolved oxygen (DO) levels: ~600 (ambient) and ~1600 (high) μatm PCO(2) and 8.0 (normoxic) and 4.5 mg l(-1) DO (hypoxic) and assessments of cellular metabolism, prey behavior and predation mortality rates were quantified after 1 and 3 weeks. Physiologically, rockfish showed acute alterations in cellular metabolic enzyme activity after 1 week of acclimation to elevated PCO(2) and hypoxia that were not evident in cabezon. Alterations in rockfish energy metabolism were driven by increases in anaerobic LDH activity, and adjustments in enzyme activity ratios of cytochrome c oxidase and citrate synthase and LDH:CS. Correlated changes in rockfish behavior were also apparent after 1 week of acclimation to elevated PCO(2) and hypoxia. Exploration behavior increased in rockfish exposed to elevated PCO(2) and spatial analysis of activity indicated short-term interference with anti-predator responses. Predation rate after 1 week increased with elevated PCO(2); however, no mortality was observed under the multiple-stressor treatment suggesting negative effects on cabezon predators. Most noteworthy, metabolic and behavioral changes were moderately compensated after 3 weeks of acclimation, and predation mortality rates also decreased suggesting that these rockfish may be resilient to changes in environmental stressors predicted by climate models. Linking physiological and behavioral responses to multiple stressors is vital to understand impacts on populations and community dynamics.
Juvenile rockfish show resilience to CO(2)-acidification and hypoxia across multiple biological scales.
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作者:Davis Brittany E, Komoroske Lisa M, Hansen Matthew J, Poletto Jamilynn B, Perry Emily N, Miller Nathan A, Ehlman Sean M, Wheeler Sarah G, Sih Andrew, Todgham Anne E, Fangue Nann A
| 期刊: | Conservation Physiology | 影响因子: | 2.500 |
| 时间: | 2018 | 起止号: | 2018 Jul 10; 6(1):coy038 |
| doi: | 10.1093/conphys/coy038 | ||
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