Abstract

Upside-down jellyfish (Cassiopea spp.) are predominantly tropical, but there have been recent reports of medusae in temperate environments. In 2017 they were recorded in temperate Lake Macquarie, Australia, where they have a tendency to disappear from this area through late winter (Austral, August). This raises questions about the role of temperature as a controlling factor of their abundance, and future density increases with warming oceans as a result of climate change. Here we test the degree to which temperature may drive winter die-offs of the medusa stage in temperate environments, and how this may change with altered thermal regimes. We assessed the physiological response of Cassiopea (via measurement of bell pulsation rate, bell diameter, and routine metabolic rate) under a regime mirroring Lake Macquarie's seasonal temperature drop (autumn into winter) compared to three other temperature profiles: 1) seasonal profile with predicted climate change (+ 2 °C), 2) stable temperatures equivalent to the end of autumn (20 °C) and, 3) a profile that mimicked the increasing temperatures from winter into summer (20 °C increasing to 24 °C). Overall, the results indicate that, compared to the ambient state, elevated temperatures can have positive effects on performance of Cassiopea medusae as evidenced by greater bell pulsation rate and bell diameter. The rate of bell diameter decline was lower in all elevated temperature treatments relative to the ambient profile. This highlights the capacity for elevated temperatures in the future to slow the rate of bell degradation, contributing to an increased probability of overwinter survival, thus increasing the size and duration of Cassiopea blooms in temperate waterways such as Lake Macquarie.

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