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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Ocean’s characteristics are rapidly changing, modifying environmental suitability for early life stages of fish. We
assessed whether the chronic effects of warming (24 ◦C) and hypoxia (<2–2.5 mg L− 1
) will be amplified by the
combination of these stressors on mortality, growth, behaviour, metabolism and oxidative stress of early stages of
the white seabream Diplodus sargus. Combined warming and hypoxia synergistically increased larval mortality by
>51%. Warming induced faster growth in length and slower gains in weight when compared to other treatments.
Boldness and exploration were not directly affected, but swimming activity increased under all test treatments.
Under the combination of warming and hypoxia, routine metabolic rate (RMR) significantly decreases when
compared to other treatments and shows a negative thermal dependence. Superoxide dismutase and catalase
activities increased under warming and were maintained similar to control levels under hypoxia or under
combined stressors. Under hypoxia, the enzymatic activities were not enough to prevent oxidative damages as
lipid peroxidation and DNA damage increased above control levels. Hypoxia reduced electron transport system
activity (cellular respiration) and isocitrate dehydrogenase activity (aerobic metabolism) below control levels.
However, lactate dehydrogenase activity (anaerobic metabolism) did not differ among treatments. A Redundancy Analysis showed that ~99% of the variability in mortality, growth, behaviour and RMR among treatments
can be explained by molecular responses. Mortality and growth are highly influenced by oxidative stress and
energy metabolism, exhibiting a positive relationship with reactive oxygen species and a negative relationship
with aerobic metabolism, regardless of treatment. Under hypoxic condition, RMR, boldness and swimming activity have a positive relationship with anaerobic metabolism regardless of temperature. Thus, seabreams may
use anaerobic reliance to counterbalance the effects of the stressors on RMR, activity and growth. The outcomes
suggests that early life stages of white seabream overcame the single and combined effects of hypoxia and
warming.
Description
Keywords
Climate change Oxygen depletion Fish larvae Fish behaviour Growth strategies Fish physiology
Citation
Lima, A. R. A., Martins-Cardoso, S., Faria, A. M., Booms, E. M., Lopes, A. R., Novais, S. C., Lemos, M. F. L., Ribeiro, L., Castanho, S., Candeias-Mendes, A., & Pousão-Ferreira, P. (2024). Early life stage mechanisms of an active fish species to cope with ocean warming and hypoxia as interacting stressors. Environmental Pollution, 341. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122989
Publisher
United Kingdom