Abstract

Selective pressures generated by locomotor challenges act at the level of the individual. However, phenotypic variation among individuals that might convey a selective advantage may occur across any of multiple levels of biological organization. In this study, we test for differences in external morphology, muscle mechanical advantage, muscle fiber type and protein expression among individuals of the waterfall climbing Hawaiian fish Sicyopterus stimpsoni collected from sequential pools increasing in elevation within a single freshwater stream. Despite predictions from previous laboratory studies of morphological selection, few directional morphometric changes in body shape were observed at successively higher elevations. Similarly, lever arm ratios associated with the main pelvic sucker, central to climbing ability in this species, did not differ between elevations. However, among climbing muscles, the adductor pelvicus complex (largely responsible for generating pelvic suction during climbing) contained a significantly greater red muscle fiber content at upstream sites. A proteomic analysis of the adductor pelvicus revealed two-fold increases in expression levels for two respiratory chain proteins (NADH:ubiquinone reductase and cytochrome b) that are essential for aerobic respiration among individuals from successively higher elevations. Assessed collectively, these evaluations reveal phenotypic differences at some, but not all levels of biological organization that are likely the result of selective pressures experienced during climbing.

Highlights

  • Nature presents a wide range of functional challenges that must be overcome by organisms if they are to survive and produce offspring for the generation [1,2]

  • The amphidromous gobioid fish Sicyopterus stimpsoni from the Hawaiian Islands presents an excellent system for testing how different levels of biological organization might be correlated with successful functional performance in a natural setting

  • This study evaluated aspects of phenotypic variation that have the potential to contribute to successful functional performance during waterfall climbing

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Summary

Introduction

Nature presents a wide range of functional challenges that must be overcome by organisms if they are to survive and produce offspring for the generation [1,2]. The amphidromous gobioid fish Sicyopterus stimpsoni from the Hawaiian Islands presents an excellent system for testing how different levels of biological organization might be correlated with successful functional performance in a natural setting. Adults may live in streams for up to five years, to escape predators in the estuaries and reach adult breeding habitats, juvenile S. stimpsoni must ascend waterfalls [8,11,12]. To climb, this species uses a slowly advancing, “inching” behavior, in which oral and pelvic suckers are alternately attached to the substrate while a portion of the body is pulled upwards [15,16,17,18,19]. These feeding rocks are associated with mate selection [22]

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