Acclimation to warming but not hypoxia alters thermal tolerance and metabolic sensitivity in an estuarine crustacean
ORCID
- Manuela Truebano: 0000-0003-2586-6524
- Michael Collins: 0000-0003-2112-5294
Abstract
Coastal species are challenged by multiple anthropogenic stressors. Plasticity may buffer the effects of environmental change, but investigation has largely been restricted to single-stressor performance. Multistressor studies have often been short-term and relatively less is known about the consequences of plasticity under one stressor for performance under another. Here, we aimed to test for the effects of thermal or hypoxic acclimation on thermal tolerance in the amphipod Gammarus chevreuxi. Animals were chronically exposed to raised temperature or hypoxia prior to determination of upper thermal limits and routine metabolic rate (RMR). Warm acclimation increased all metrics of thermal tolerance, but hypoxic acclimation had no effect. Different responses to the two stressors was also observed for the thermal sensitivity of RMR. Consequently, this species possesses the ability to increase thermal tolerance via plasticity in response to chronic warming but increasing duration of hypoxic episodes will not confer cross-tolerance to a warming environment.
DOI
10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106565
Publication Date
2024-06-01
Publication Title
Mar Environ Res
Volume
198
ISSN
0141-1136
Embargo Period
2026-05-29
Keywords
Beneficial acclimation, Cross-tolerance, Multistressor, Thermal tolerance
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Collins, M., Bridge, R., & Truebano, M. (2024) 'Acclimation to warming but not hypoxia alters thermal tolerance and metabolic sensitivity in an estuarine crustacean', Mar Environ Res, 198. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106565