Abstract

To examine the effect of ontogeny on metabolic depression in the cunner (Tautogolabrus adspersus), and to understand how ontogeny and the ability to metabolically depress influence this species' upper thermal tolerance: 1) the metabolic rate of 9°C-acclimated cunner of three size classes [0.2–0.5 g, young of the year (YOY); 3–6 g, small; and 80–120 g, large (adult)] was measured during a 2°C per day decrease in temperature; and 2) the metabolic response of the same three size classes of cunner to an acute thermal challenge [2°C h−1 from 10°C until Critical Thermal Maximum, CTMax] was examined, and compared to that of the Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua). The onset-temperature for metabolic depression in cunner increased with body size, i.e. from 5°C in YOY cunner to 7°C in adults. In contrast, the extent of metabolic depression was ∼80% (Q10 = ∼15) for YOY fish, ∼65% (Q10 = ∼8) for small fish and ∼55% (Q10 = ∼5) for adults, and this resulted in the metabolic scaling exponent (b) gradually increasing from 0.84 to 0.92 between 9°C to 1°C. All size classes of cunner had significantly (approximately 60%) lower routine metabolic rates at 10°C than Atlantic cod. However, there was no species' difference in the temperature-induced maximum metabolic rate, and this resulted in factorial metabolic scope values that were more than two-fold greater for cunner, and CTMax values that were 6–9°C higher (∼21 vs. 28°C). These results: 1) show that ontogeny influences the temperature of initiation and the extent of metabolic depression in cunner, but not O2 consumption when in a hypometabolic state; and 2) suggest that the evolution of cold-induced metabolic depression in this northern wrasse species has not resulted in a trade-off with upper thermal tolerance, but instead, an enhancement of this species' metabolic plasticity.

Highlights

  • Metabolic depression is a physiological strategy employed by species of all major animal phyla to maximize survival time in unfavourable environmental conditions such as extremes in temperature, hypoxia, desiccation, hypersalinity and food deprivation [1], [2]

  • For all three size classes, a decrease in temperature from 9 ̊C to 1 ̊C resulted in a dramatic drop in metabolic rate to a level where there was no significant difference in MO2 between the three size classes (Fig. 1)

  • The rapid drop in routine metabolic rate (RMR) occurred over a 4 degree range for all size classes, it was initiated at different temperatures (7 ̊C, 6 ̊C and 5 ̊C for adult, small and YOY cunner, respectively), and the drop in MO2 over this temperature range was much greater for YOY cunner (Q10514.96) as compared with small (Q1058.05) and large (Q1054.92) fish (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Metabolic depression is a physiological strategy employed by species of all major animal phyla to maximize survival time in unfavourable environmental conditions such as extremes in temperature, hypoxia, desiccation, hypersalinity and food deprivation [1], [2]. This strategy relies on endogenous energy reserves, and typically involves a combination of a reduction in energy utilization (e.g. activity) and physiological functions (heart rate, breathing, or ventilation rate), and the downregulation or cessation of non-essential cellular functions such as anabolism and growth [1], [3], [4]. Only a few studies [10,11,12,13] have investigated the role of metabolic depression in fish species in response to low environmental temperatures

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