Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"

This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods) Olfactory measurements were recorded after a 2 minute acclimation period to the flume. Documentation of a stream preference (via L or R) occurred by direct observation, measuring every 5 seconds for 2 min...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Megan Joan Welch (hasAssociationWith), Megan Joan Welch (hasCollector), Philip Laing Munday (hasAssociationWith), Philip Laing Munday (hasCollector)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: James Cook University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/raw-olfactory-quotheritability-phenotypic-plasticityquot/987283
https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/99697eddc97deea0235892e07bd164d5
https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::987283
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic genetic variation
ocean acidification
behaviour
phenotypic plasticity
parent-offspring regression
Acanthochromis polyacanthus
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
Ecological Impacts of Climate Change
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Behavioural Ecology
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGY
spellingShingle genetic variation
ocean acidification
behaviour
phenotypic plasticity
parent-offspring regression
Acanthochromis polyacanthus
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
Ecological Impacts of Climate Change
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Behavioural Ecology
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGY
Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
topic_facet genetic variation
ocean acidification
behaviour
phenotypic plasticity
parent-offspring regression
Acanthochromis polyacanthus
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
Ecological Impacts of Climate Change
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Behavioural Ecology
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ECOLOGY
description This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods) Olfactory measurements were recorded after a 2 minute acclimation period to the flume. Documentation of a stream preference (via L or R) occurred by direct observation, measuring every 5 seconds for 2 minutes. Incoming water streams were then switched, and the fish was given another acclimation period before the second half of testing. Each fish was only tested once, accept for the adult fished used for behaviour repeatability. Repeated fish were given 24 hours rest between trials. Abstract [Related Publication]: Previous studies have demonstrated limited potential for acclimation of adversely affected olfactory behaviours in reef fishes under elevated CO₂, indicating that genetic adaptation will be required to maintain behavioural performance in the future. Adaptation depends on the presence of heritable phenotypic variation in the trait, which may differ between populations and environments. We used parent–offspring regressions to estimate the heritability (h2) of variation in behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ (754 μatm) in both field-collected and laboratory-reared families of Acanthochromis polyacanthus. Tolerance to elevated CO₂ was measured by determining the behavioural response of individuals to chemical alarm cues. Both populations exhibited high heritability of olfactory behaviour phenotype (father–mid-offspring h2 = 0.56 & 0.65, respectively) when offspring were acutely exposed to high CO₂ for 4 days. However, there was no heritability in the behavioural phenotype when juveniles were chronically exposed to high CO₂ for 6 weeks in the laboratory-reared families. Parental exposure to high CO₂ during the breeding season did not alter this relationship between heritability and length of juvenile exposure to high CO₂. These results demonstrate that variation in behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ is heritable, but adaptive potential may be constrained by a loss of phenotypic variation when juveniles ...
author2 Megan Joan Welch (hasAssociationWith)
Megan Joan Welch (hasCollector)
Philip Laing Munday (hasAssociationWith)
Philip Laing Munday (hasCollector)
format Dataset
title Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
title_short Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
title_full Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
title_fullStr Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
title_full_unstemmed Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
title_sort raw olfactory data for "heritability of behavioural tolerance to high co₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity"
publisher James Cook University
url https://researchdata.edu.au/raw-olfactory-quotheritability-phenotypic-plasticityquot/987283
https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/99697eddc97deea0235892e07bd164d5
https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54
op_coverage Spatial: 145.47537607631,-14.740768642786 145.49498146189,-14.72766850629 145.50944148071,-14.709349042826 145.51734068537,-14.687602437384 145.51790584668,-14.66455671967 145.51108164271,-14.642467716571 145.4975360741,-14.623498253261 145.47859507548,-14.60950621087 145.45611272376,-14.601862275666 145.43228974818,-14.601315367835 145.40945810756,-14.607919073948 145.38985272197,-14.621026381989 145.37539270315,-14.63935324171 145.36749349849,-14.661104643002 145.36692833718,-14.684150724303 145.37375254115,-14.70623551985 145.38729810976,-14.725197811612 145.40623910838,-14.739182457747 145.4287214601,-14.746821597107 145.45254443569,-14.747368141351 145.47537607631,-14.740768642786
Spatial: 146.76242298833,-19.328975069866 146.76240857419,-19.328079262542 146.7621015113,-19.327231497783 146.76153185712,-19.326514762061 146.76075537337,-19.325999216577 146.75984806768,-19.325735328587 146.75889875347,-19.325748930529 146.75800035622,-19.326038690881 146.75724081732,-19.326576244533 146.75669448571,-19.327308969874 146.75641484015,-19.328165140568 146.7564292543,-19.329060947422 146.75673631719,-19.329908702686 146.75730597137,-19.330625423516 146.75808245512,-19.3311409544 146.7589897608,-19.331404833657 146.75993907501,-19.331391232187 146.76083747226,-19.331101481329 146.76159701117,-19.330563942568 146.76214334277,-19.329831231828 146.76242298833,-19.328975069866
Spatial: Brooding offspring collected from the Lizard Island lagoon on the northern Great Barrier Reef (14°40′S, 145°28′E); adults collected from northern Great Barrier Reef and transported to experimental aquarium facility at James Cook University, Townsville, Australia
Spatial: Lizard Island Research Station, Queensland, Australia
Spatial: James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Temporal: From 2014-03-01 to 2015-03-01
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.456,-64.456,-65.688,-65.688)
geographic Lizard Island
Queensland
geographic_facet Lizard Island
Queensland
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/raw-olfactory-quotheritability-phenotypic-plasticityquot/987283
fdcb979ff9d42d3d418d4253a7af4020
https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/99697eddc97deea0235892e07bd164d5
doi:10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54
_version_ 1785572212580810752
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::987283 2023-12-17T10:48:07+01:00 Raw olfactory data for "Heritability of behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ in a coral reef fish is masked by non-adaptive phenotypic plasticity" Megan Joan Welch (hasAssociationWith) Megan Joan Welch (hasCollector) Philip Laing Munday (hasAssociationWith) Philip Laing Munday (hasCollector) Spatial: 145.47537607631,-14.740768642786 145.49498146189,-14.72766850629 145.50944148071,-14.709349042826 145.51734068537,-14.687602437384 145.51790584668,-14.66455671967 145.51108164271,-14.642467716571 145.4975360741,-14.623498253261 145.47859507548,-14.60950621087 145.45611272376,-14.601862275666 145.43228974818,-14.601315367835 145.40945810756,-14.607919073948 145.38985272197,-14.621026381989 145.37539270315,-14.63935324171 145.36749349849,-14.661104643002 145.36692833718,-14.684150724303 145.37375254115,-14.70623551985 145.38729810976,-14.725197811612 145.40623910838,-14.739182457747 145.4287214601,-14.746821597107 145.45254443569,-14.747368141351 145.47537607631,-14.740768642786 Spatial: 146.76242298833,-19.328975069866 146.76240857419,-19.328079262542 146.7621015113,-19.327231497783 146.76153185712,-19.326514762061 146.76075537337,-19.325999216577 146.75984806768,-19.325735328587 146.75889875347,-19.325748930529 146.75800035622,-19.326038690881 146.75724081732,-19.326576244533 146.75669448571,-19.327308969874 146.75641484015,-19.328165140568 146.7564292543,-19.329060947422 146.75673631719,-19.329908702686 146.75730597137,-19.330625423516 146.75808245512,-19.3311409544 146.7589897608,-19.331404833657 146.75993907501,-19.331391232187 146.76083747226,-19.331101481329 146.76159701117,-19.330563942568 146.76214334277,-19.329831231828 146.76242298833,-19.328975069866 Spatial: Brooding offspring collected from the Lizard Island lagoon on the northern Great Barrier Reef (14°40′S, 145°28′E); adults collected from northern Great Barrier Reef and transported to experimental aquarium facility at James Cook University, Townsville, Australia Spatial: Lizard Island Research Station, Queensland, Australia Spatial: James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia Temporal: From 2014-03-01 to 2015-03-01 https://researchdata.edu.au/raw-olfactory-quotheritability-phenotypic-plasticityquot/987283 https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/99697eddc97deea0235892e07bd164d5 https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54 unknown James Cook University https://researchdata.edu.au/raw-olfactory-quotheritability-phenotypic-plasticityquot/987283 fdcb979ff9d42d3d418d4253a7af4020 https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/99697eddc97deea0235892e07bd164d5 doi:10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54 https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/ genetic variation ocean acidification behaviour phenotypic plasticity parent-offspring regression Acanthochromis polyacanthus ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies Ecological Impacts of Climate Change ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS Behavioural Ecology BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES ECOLOGY dataset ftands https://doi.org/10.4225/28/5a77bd4e01e54 2023-11-20T23:29:27Z This dataset is available as a spreadsheet in MS Excel (.xlsx) and Open Document formats (.ods) Olfactory measurements were recorded after a 2 minute acclimation period to the flume. Documentation of a stream preference (via L or R) occurred by direct observation, measuring every 5 seconds for 2 minutes. Incoming water streams were then switched, and the fish was given another acclimation period before the second half of testing. Each fish was only tested once, accept for the adult fished used for behaviour repeatability. Repeated fish were given 24 hours rest between trials. Abstract [Related Publication]: Previous studies have demonstrated limited potential for acclimation of adversely affected olfactory behaviours in reef fishes under elevated CO₂, indicating that genetic adaptation will be required to maintain behavioural performance in the future. Adaptation depends on the presence of heritable phenotypic variation in the trait, which may differ between populations and environments. We used parent–offspring regressions to estimate the heritability (h2) of variation in behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ (754 μatm) in both field-collected and laboratory-reared families of Acanthochromis polyacanthus. Tolerance to elevated CO₂ was measured by determining the behavioural response of individuals to chemical alarm cues. Both populations exhibited high heritability of olfactory behaviour phenotype (father–mid-offspring h2 = 0.56 & 0.65, respectively) when offspring were acutely exposed to high CO₂ for 4 days. However, there was no heritability in the behavioural phenotype when juveniles were chronically exposed to high CO₂ for 6 weeks in the laboratory-reared families. Parental exposure to high CO₂ during the breeding season did not alter this relationship between heritability and length of juvenile exposure to high CO₂. These results demonstrate that variation in behavioural tolerance to high CO₂ is heritable, but adaptive potential may be constrained by a loss of phenotypic variation when juveniles ... Dataset Ocean acidification Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Lizard Island ENVELOPE(-64.456,-64.456,-65.688,-65.688) Queensland