{"title":"Thermal ecology of red lionfish Pterois volitans from Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia, with comparisons to other Scorpaenidae","authors":"Theresa F. Dabruzzi, W. Bennett, N. Fangue","doi":"10.3354/AB00668","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Scorpionfishes (family Scorpaenidae) occupy a wide range of thermal environments, yet little is known about the group’s thermal ecology. Recent invasions by red lionfish Pterois volitans and devil firefish P. miles into the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea have stimulated interest in the ability of these species to withstand thermal extremes, but current temperature data are limited to cold tolerance estimates, or employ nonstandard techniques, making it difficult to compare values across studies. Using standardized methodologies, we quantified metabolic, physiological, and behavioral thermal responses of red lionfish from the Banda Sea, Sulawesi, Indonesia, and interpret the data in light of the group’s diversity and range of thermal habitats. Red lionfish acclimated at temperatures between 13 and 32°C exhibit a thermal scope of nearly 25°C. The resulting thermal niche is moderately large, allowing lionfish to exploit a wide range of thermal habitats, from mid-Atlantic coastal waters to hyperthermal tropical mangroves and tidepools. Although lionfish prefer temperatures of ~23°C, they acclimate to the high temperature of a cycling thermoperiod. This feature, along with their comparatively low temperature sensitivity (metabolic temperature quotient <2), likely permits lionfish to limit energetic costs during forays into warmer waters. Although lionfishes are considered to be a tropical group, they exhibit a number of thermal tolerance characteristics that allow them to persist in some surprisingly cool environments. Modeling thermal strategies used by red lionfish may provide new insights to the range and variability of thermal adaptations of scorpaenid fishes in general.","PeriodicalId":8111,"journal":{"name":"Aquatic Biology","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2017-02-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"23","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Aquatic Biology","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3354/AB00668","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 23
Abstract
Scorpionfishes (family Scorpaenidae) occupy a wide range of thermal environments, yet little is known about the group’s thermal ecology. Recent invasions by red lionfish Pterois volitans and devil firefish P. miles into the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea have stimulated interest in the ability of these species to withstand thermal extremes, but current temperature data are limited to cold tolerance estimates, or employ nonstandard techniques, making it difficult to compare values across studies. Using standardized methodologies, we quantified metabolic, physiological, and behavioral thermal responses of red lionfish from the Banda Sea, Sulawesi, Indonesia, and interpret the data in light of the group’s diversity and range of thermal habitats. Red lionfish acclimated at temperatures between 13 and 32°C exhibit a thermal scope of nearly 25°C. The resulting thermal niche is moderately large, allowing lionfish to exploit a wide range of thermal habitats, from mid-Atlantic coastal waters to hyperthermal tropical mangroves and tidepools. Although lionfish prefer temperatures of ~23°C, they acclimate to the high temperature of a cycling thermoperiod. This feature, along with their comparatively low temperature sensitivity (metabolic temperature quotient <2), likely permits lionfish to limit energetic costs during forays into warmer waters. Although lionfishes are considered to be a tropical group, they exhibit a number of thermal tolerance characteristics that allow them to persist in some surprisingly cool environments. Modeling thermal strategies used by red lionfish may provide new insights to the range and variability of thermal adaptations of scorpaenid fishes in general.
蝎子鱼(Scorpaenidae科)占据了广泛的热环境,但对该群体的热生态知之甚少。最近,红狮鱼(Pterois volitans)和魔鬼萤火虫(devil firefish P. miles)入侵大西洋和地中海,激发了人们对这些物种抵御极端高温能力的兴趣,但目前的温度数据仅限于耐寒性估计,或采用非标准技术,因此很难对不同研究的值进行比较。使用标准化的方法,我们量化了来自印度尼西亚苏拉威西班达海的红狮鱼的代谢、生理和行为热反应,并根据该群体的多样性和热栖息地的范围来解释数据。在13至32°C的温度下适应的红狮鱼表现出接近25°C的热范围。由此产生的热生态位是中等大小的,允许狮子鱼利用广泛的热栖息地,从大西洋中部沿海水域到高温的热带红树林和潮汐池。虽然狮子鱼更喜欢~23°C的温度,但它们适应了循环热周期的高温。这一特点,加上它们相对较低的温度敏感性(代谢温度商<2),可能使狮子鱼在进入较温暖的水域时限制了能量消耗。尽管狮子鱼被认为是热带种群,但它们表现出许多耐热性特征,使它们能够在一些令人惊讶的凉爽环境中生存。对红狮鱼的热适应策略进行建模,可以为了解蝎科鱼类的热适应范围和变异性提供新的见解。
期刊介绍:
AB publishes rigorously refereed and carefully selected Feature Articles, Research Articles, Reviews and Notes, as well as Comments/Reply Comments (for details see MEPS 228:1), Theme Sections, Opinion Pieces (previously called ''As I See It'') (for details consult the Guidelines for Authors) concerned with the biology, physiology, biochemistry and genetics (including the ’omics‘) of all aquatic organisms under laboratory and field conditions, and at all levels of organisation and investigation. Areas covered include:
-Biological aspects of biota: Evolution and speciation; life histories; biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography; population genetics; biological connectedness between marine and freshwater biota; paleobiology of aquatic environments; invasive species.
-Biochemical and physiological aspects of aquatic life; synthesis and conversion of organic matter (mechanisms of auto- and heterotrophy, digestion, respiration, nutrition); thermo-, ion, osmo- and volume-regulation; stress and stress resistance; metabolism and energy budgets; non-genetic and genetic adaptation.
-Species interactions: Environment–organism and organism–organism interrelationships; predation: defenses (physical and chemical); symbioses.
-Molecular biology of aquatic life.
-Behavior: Orientation in space and time; migrations; feeding and reproductive behavior; agonistic behavior.
-Toxicology and water-quality effects on organisms; anthropogenic impacts on aquatic biota (e.g. pollution, fisheries); stream regulation and restoration.
-Theoretical biology: mathematical modelling of biological processes and species interactions.
-Methodology and equipment employed in aquatic biological research; underwater exploration and experimentation.
-Exploitation of aquatic biota: Fisheries; cultivation of aquatic organisms: use, management, protection and conservation of living aquatic resources.
-Reproduction and development in marine, brackish and freshwater organisms