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Thermal tolerance and routine oxygen consumption of convict cichlid, Archocentrus nigrofasciatus , acclimated to constant temperatures (20 °C and 30 °C) and a daily temperature cycle (20 °C → 30 °C)

Cassidy J. Cooper, William B. Kristan III,John Eme

Journal of Comparative Physiology B(2021)

Cited 5|Views2
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Abstract
Organismal temperature tolerance and metabolic responses are correlated to recent thermal history, but responses to thermal variability are less frequently assessed. There is great interest in whether organisms that experience greater thermal variability can gain metabolic or tolerance advantages through phenotypic plasticity. We compared thermal tolerance and routine aerobic metabolism of Convict cichlid acclimated for 2 weeks to constant 20 °C, constant 30 °C, or a daily cycle of 20 → 30 °C (1.7 °C/h). Acute routine mass-specific oxygen consumption ( Ṁ O 2 ) and critical thermal maxima/minima (CTMax/CTMin) were compared between groups, with cycle-acclimated fish sampled from the daily minimum (20 °C, 0900 h) and maximum (30 °C, 1600 h). Cycle-acclimated fish demonstrated statistically similar CTMax at the daily minimum and maximum (39.0 °C, 38.6 °C) but distinct CTMin values, with CTMin 2.4 °C higher for fish sampled from the daily 30 °C maximum (14.8 °C) compared to the daily 20 °C minimum (12.4 °C). Measured acutely at 30 °C, Ṁ O 2 decreased with increasing acclimation temperature; 20 °C acclimated fish had an 85
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Key words
Acclimation,Critical thermal tolerance,Cycling,Fish,Metabolism,Thermal variation
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