Abstract
Survival through periods of resource scarcity depends on the balance between metabolic demands and energy storage. The opposing effects of predation and starvation mortality are predicted to result in trade-offs between traits that optimize fitness during periods of resource plenty (e.g., during the growing season) and those that optimize fitness during periods of resource scarcity (e.g., during the winter). We conducted a common environment experiment with two genetically distinct strains of rainbow trout to investigate trade-offs due to (1) the balance of growth and predation risk related to foraging rate during the growing season and (2) the allocation of energy to body size prior to the winter. Fry (age 0) from both strains were stocked into replicate natural lakes at low and high elevation that differed in winter duration (i.e., ice cover) by 59 days. Overwinter survival was lowest in the high-elevation lakes for both strains. Activity rate and growth rate were highest at high elevation, but growing season survival did not differ between strains or between environments. Hence, we did not observe a trade-off between growth and predation risk related to foraging rate. Growth rate also differed significantly between the strains across both environments, which suggests that growth rate is involved in local adaptation. There was not, however, a difference between strains or between environments in energy storage. Hence, we did not observe a trade-off between growth and storage. Our findings suggest that intrinsic metabolic rate, which affects a trade-off between growth rate and overwinter survival, may influence local adaptation in organisms that experience particularly harsh winter conditions (e.g., extended periods trapped beneath the ice in high-elevation lakes) in some parts of their range.
Highlights
Mid- to high latitudes are typically characterized by a high degree of environmental heterogeneity
Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
We investigated the existence of a trade-off between foraging activity and predation risk (T.O. #1) by measuring variability in activity rate and growing season survival across low- and highelevation environments, and we investigated the existence of a trade-off between body size and storage (T.O. #2) by measuring growth rate and lipid concentration across environments
Summary
Mid- to high latitudes are typically characterized by a high degree of environmental heterogeneity. Seasonal environmental fluctuations (e.g., winter versus summer) vary tremendously across a gradient in latitude or elevation (e.g., long and harsh versus short and mild winters). Populations that occupy such environmental gradients experience different annual cycles of resource availability and predator abundance, which influence behavioral, physiological, and ecological processes with important fitness consequences (McNamara and Houston 2008; Varpe et al 2009). In many species, high rates of consumption are associated with a high risk of predation (Ali et al 2003; Biro et al 2004a).
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