Subtle temperature increase can interact with individual size and social context in shaping phenotypic traits of a coldwater fish

Type Article
Date 2019-03
Language English
Author(s) Leblanc C. A.1, Horri KhaledORCID2, 3, Skulason S.1, Benhaim D.1
Affiliation(s) 1 : Holar Univ Coll, Dept Aquaculture & Fish Biol, Saudarkrokur, Iceland.
2 : Ctr Manche Mer Nord, Lab Ressources Halieut, Ifremer, Boulogne Sur Mer, France.
3 : Univ Le Havre Normandie, Unite Stress Environm & BlOsurveillance Milieux A, FR CNRS Scale 3730, UMR I 02,SEBIO,INERIS,URCA,ULH, Le Havre, France.
Source Plos One (1932-6203) (Public Library Science), 2019-03 , Vol. 14 , N. 3 , P. e021306 (21p.)
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0213061
WOS© Times Cited 5
Abstract

Temperature and individual egg size have been long studied in the development of fishes because of their direct effects on individual fitness. Here we studied the combined effects of three important factors for fish development, i.e. egg size, social environment and water temperature. Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus), a coldwater fish known to be phenotypically plastic, was used to investigate how these factors may affect growth and foraging behaviour of juvenile fish in a benign environment. We accounted for the social environment during early development by comparing fish raised in groups and in isolation. We examined the effect of egg size and a 2 degrees C difference on foraging behaviour, activity and growth a few weeks after first feeding. Growth trajectories of fish originating from large and small eggs were similar within each temperature: larger fish coming large eggs were at all time larger than smaller fish. There was no indication that small fish raised at a higher temperature grew faster than larger fish raised at a lower temperature. A 2 degrees C difference in temperature affected the behaviour of fish differently according to body size and/or social context. The foraging probability difference between fish raised in groups and fish briefly isolated was higher at 4.5 degrees C than at 6.5 degrees C for both size fish. Finally, there was no repeatability in foraging behaviour and mobility for isolated individuals. These results highlight the importance of small changes in temperature when evaluating growth and behaviour of fishes, and reveal the importance of considering the interaction of temperature with other factors, e.g. individual size and social environment, especially at early stages of development in fishes. We discuss these findings in the context of rapid changes in temperature and how temperature and its interaction with other factors may affect the phenotypes, ecology and evolution of coldwater fishes.

Full Text
File Pages Size Access
Publisher's official version 21 1 MB Open access
S1 Dataset. Data set for behavioural variables. 29 KB Open access
S2 Dataset. Data set for growth. 20 KB Open access
S1 Table. Random effects testing using Likelihood Ratio Test (LRT). 1 24 KB Open access
S2 Table. Random effects testing using Likelihood Ratio Test (LRT). 1 22 KB Open access
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