Diet and temperature linked to metabolism in opaleye fish
Both had an effect fish metabolism, but the effects were specific to individual traits
Date:
December 14, 2021
Source:
University of California - Santa Barbara
Summary:
Whether it's warm outside or cold, people generally eat about
the same amount. But a fish's appetite can vary enormously with
the temperature.
As coldblooded animals, their metabolism is governed by external
conditions: It's slow going for a cold fish, but high temperatures
kick them into high gear.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Whether it's warm outside or cold, people generally eat about the
same amount.
But a fish's appetite can vary enormously with the temperature. As
coldblooded animals, their metabolism is governed by external conditions:
It's slow going for a cold fish, but high temperatures kick them into
high gear.
==========================================================================
To better understand how temperature affects our finned friends,
researchers at UC Santa Barbara studied opaleye fish under a variety
of temperatures and diets. They found that both diet and temperature
influenced fish physiology and metabolism, but the effects were specific
to each trait. The results, published in the Journal of Experimental
Biology, further chip away at the assumption that an animal's biological processes all respond the same way to different temperatures.
Opaleye were an ideal model to study this interaction. The omnivorous
fish are a common sight in kelp forests and reefs from Point Conception
to southern Baja California. In 2006, UCSB researchers found that wild
opaleye eat more algae in the warmer, southern part of their range than
in the colder north. And other omnivorous fish show a similar trend.
"We hypothesized they were doing this because it benefitted them,"
said lead author Emily Hardison, a doctoral student in the Department
of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology.
To test this, the team observed the fish under four different temperature
and diet combinations. Half the fish were fed exclusively brine shrimp,
while the other half were free to eat a mixture of brine shrimp and Ulva
algae, a species that opaleye consume in the wild. The researchers then
divided each of these groups, with half in water at 12DEG Celsius and
the other half at 20DEG C.
These temperatures correspond to the seasonal extremes wild fish
experience in Santa Barbara.
The team recorded the fish's growth over time and their sprint speed
under the various treatments. They also measured the animals' baseline metabolic rates, as well as the maximum metabolic rate the fish achieved
when they were active.
To do this, the scientists used a method called aquatic respirometry,
where they logged the rate of oxygen consumption for each fish after
exercise and during rest. The difference between the maximum and the
baseline rates is the animal's aerobic scope, which Hardison described
as the fish's energetic capacity to thrive in its environment: swim,
eat, digest, find a mate and so forth.
==========================================================================
The researchers also conducted tests to establish the fish's thermal
tolerance limits, including measuring the thermal tolerance of the
animal's heart.
Previous findings suggest that the heart may be the first organ to fail
due to heat stress in fishes.
"We found that diet could influence the temperature response that the fish
had, but it wasn't consistent across all these important measurements
that we made," Hardison said. Fish that ate a mixed diet had a higher
baseline metabolism, which the researchers expected given that plant
matter requires more energy to digest. Meanwhile, the fish's sprint
speed was completely unaffected by diet or temperature.
Diet also had no effect on the animals' growth rates; however, temperature
made an enormous difference. "At 20 degrees, the fish ate so much, and
they grew so much. Whereas at 12 they barely ate, and they did not grow,"
said co-author Erika Eliason, an assistant professor of ecological and evolutionary physiology.
"All these different rates don't scale in the exact same way," she
continued.
"Growth does not scale in the same way as heart rate, which doesn't scale
in the same way as metabolism. They're all influenced by temperature
in different ways." Scientists used to assume that all of an animal's processes were optimized to the same temperature range. It certainly
made modeling easier. "But biology's complex," said Hardison, "and so we
think that the optimal range for different biological rates is going to
be different." While this is not the first paper to chip away at this assumption, it is the first to investigate how an animal's diet may
influence the optimal temperature for different processes.
========================================================================== Additionally, the more herbivorous diet didn't seem to confer any
benefits. For instance, omnivorous fish couldn't achieve heart rates
as high as their more carnivorous counterparts. This suggests that the
mixed diet may have reduced their hearts' capacity.
"That was a big surprise," Hardison said. Since wild opaleye are more herbivorous in the warmer parts of their range, the researchers had
thought this diet might help the fish's hearts. "On the contrary,
there were only costs to eating more algae. There were no benefits to
the traits that we measured.
"That suggested it's a more complex story than what we originally
thought," Hardison continued, "and that there could be other ecological
reasons why these fish are changing their diet with temperature."
Indeed, this is still an open question. The team plans to look into the digestive costs of an herbivorous diet, which might shed some light on
the opaleye's preferences.
The group is also investigating how a fish's diet can influence its
response to marine heatwaves. In order to respond to these events,
animals need the energy and nutrients to remodel their physiology. As
a result, the researchers suspect that diet may influence how quickly
animals can acclimate to new conditions.
"The intersection between nutrition and temperature is really
understudied," Hardison said.
Understanding the nexus of diet and environmental conditions is crucial
in the face of climate change. Global warming is not only raising water temperatures, it's also changing the nutritional landscape. Climate
change can alter food quality and quantity, Eliason explained. So even
for animals that don't shift their diet in response to temperature,
what's available to them might change.
And temperature is just one condition in flux. Climate change is affecting acidity, salinity and even dissolved oxygen content in the ocean. How
these interact with animals' diets and physiology is still under study.
Krista Kraskura and Jacey Van Wert (both in the Eliason lab) also
contributed to this study, as did former UC Davis student Tina Nguyen,
who spent eight weeks in the lab as part of the UC LEADS program. The
work was funded by Eliason's Hellman Faculty Fellowship.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
University_of_California_-_Santa_Barbara. Original written by Harrison
Tasoff. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Emily A. Hardison, Krista Kraskura, Jacey Van Wert, Tina Nguyen,
Erika J.
Eliason. Diet mediates thermal performance traits: implications
for marine ectotherms. Journal of Experimental Biology, 2021; 224
(21) DOI: 10.1242/jeb.242846 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/12/211214134954.htm
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