Abstract

Metabolically important traits, such as gill surface area and metabolic rate, underpin life histories, population dynamics and extinction risk, as they govern the availability of energy for growth, survival and reproduction. Estimating both gill surface area and metabolic rate can be challenging, especially when working with large-bodied, threatened species. Ideally, these traits, and respiratory physiology in general, could be inferred from external morphology using a faster, non-lethal method. Gill slit height is quick to measure on live organisms and is anatomically connected to the gill arch. Here, we relate gill slit height and gill surface area for five Carcharhiniform sharks. We compared both total and parabranchial gill surface area to mean and individual gill slit height in physical specimens. We also compared empirical measurements of relative gill slit height (i.e. in proportion to total length) to those estimated from field guide illustrations to examine the potential of using anatomical drawings to measure gill slit height. We find strong positive relationships between gill slit height and gill surface area at two scales: (i) for total gill surface area and mean gill slit height across species and (ii) for parabranchial gill surface area and individual gill slit height within and across species. We also find that gill slit height is a consistent proportion of the fork length of physical specimens. Consequently, relative gill slit height measured from field guide illustrations proved to be surprisingly comparable to those measured from physical specimens. While the generality of our findings needs to be evaluated across a wider range of taxonomy and ecological lifestyles, they offer the opportunity that we might only need to go to the library and measure field guide illustrations to yield a non-lethal, first-order approximation of the respiratory physiology of sharks.

Highlights

  • Many exploited fishes are data-poor, lacking the demographic and life history data for fisheries assessments (Sadovy, 2005; Ricard et al, 2012; Temple et al, 2020)

  • We found that gill slit height is closely related to gill surface area in the five Carcharhiniform shark species and that measuring gill slit height from field guide illustrations is a promising avenue to infer gill surface area and reduce lethal sampling for a wider range of species

  • The relationship of total gill surface area and mean gill slit height was consistent across all species and this pattern was mirrored for the relationship of parabranchial gill surface area and individual gill slit height, which was consistent within and across species

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Summary

Introduction

Many exploited fishes are data-poor, lacking the demographic and life history data for fisheries assessments (Sadovy, 2005; Ricard et al, 2012; Temple et al, 2020). Larger-bodied species with slower growth rates are more likely to decline as a result of overfishing than their smaller, by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Our working thesis is that simple morphological traits (i.e. heritable characteristics) that relate to metabolic rate and gill surface area—such as gill slit height—may offer other time-related traits with which to infer the response of species to threats, such as overfishing, and the effects of elevated temperature and lower oxygen availability from climate change (Chown et al, 2004; Pauly, 2010)

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