The global impact of climate change on fish

This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University. Climate change is a global issue and the effects on fish populations remain largely unknown. It is thought that climate change could affect fish at all levels of biological organisation, from cellular,...

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Main Author: Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth
Other Authors: Sumpter, J, Johnson, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Brunel University Institute for the Environment PhD Theses 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7362
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spelling ftbruneluniv:oai:bura.brunel.ac.uk:2438/7362 2023-05-15T17:52:12+02:00 The global impact of climate change on fish Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth Sumpter, J Johnson, A 2013 http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7362 en eng Brunel University Institute for the Environment PhD Theses http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/bitstream/2438/7362/1/FulltextThesis.pdf http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7362 Three-spined stickleback Great barrier reef River Thames Thesis 2013 ftbruneluniv 2021-08-08T08:34:55Z This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University. Climate change is a global issue and the effects on fish populations remain largely unknown. It is thought that climate change could affect fish at all levels of biological organisation, from cellular, individual, population and community. This thesis has taken a holistic approach to examine the ways in which climate change could affect fish from both tropical, marine ecosystems (Great Barrier Reef, Australia) and temperate, freshwater ecosystems (non-tidal River Thames, Britain). Aerobic scope of coral reef fish tested on the Great Barrier Reef was significantly reduced by just a 2°C rise in water temperature (31, 32 and 33°C, compared to the current summer mean of 29°C) due to increased resting oxygen consumption and an inability to increase the maximal oxygen uptake. A 0.3 unit decline in pH, representative of ocean acidification, caused the same percentage loss in aerobic scope as did a 3°C warming. Interfamilial differences in ability to cope aerobically with warming waters will likely lead to changes in the community structure on coral reefs with damselfish replacing cardinalfish. Concerning Britain, there is evidence of gradual warming and increased rainfall in winter months over a 150 year period, suggesting that British fish are already experiencing climate change. It was evident from an analysis of a 15 year dataset on fish populations in the River Thames, that cyprinid species displayed a different pattern in biomass and density to all the non-cyprinid fish population, suggesting that there will be interfamilial differences in responses to climate change. Using a Biological Indicator Approach on the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus, a 2°C rise in water temperature resulted in a stress response at the cellular and whole organism level. A 6°C rise in temperature resulted in a stress response at the biochemical level (higher cortisol and glucose concentrations), cellular level (higher neutrophil: lymphocyte ratio) and whole organism level (higher ventilation rate and lowered condition factor, hepatosomatic index and growth). G. aculeatus is considered to be temperature tolerant; therefore these results indicate that climate change may prove to be stressful for more temperature-sensitive species. This study has demonstrated that climate change will have direct effects on fish populations, whether they are in temperate regions such as Britain or in tropical coral reefs, but with strong interfamilial differences in those responses. Thesis Ocean acidification Brunel University London: Brunel University Research Archive (BURA)
institution Open Polar
collection Brunel University London: Brunel University Research Archive (BURA)
op_collection_id ftbruneluniv
language English
topic Three-spined stickleback
Great barrier reef
River Thames
spellingShingle Three-spined stickleback
Great barrier reef
River Thames
Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth
The global impact of climate change on fish
topic_facet Three-spined stickleback
Great barrier reef
River Thames
description This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University. Climate change is a global issue and the effects on fish populations remain largely unknown. It is thought that climate change could affect fish at all levels of biological organisation, from cellular, individual, population and community. This thesis has taken a holistic approach to examine the ways in which climate change could affect fish from both tropical, marine ecosystems (Great Barrier Reef, Australia) and temperate, freshwater ecosystems (non-tidal River Thames, Britain). Aerobic scope of coral reef fish tested on the Great Barrier Reef was significantly reduced by just a 2°C rise in water temperature (31, 32 and 33°C, compared to the current summer mean of 29°C) due to increased resting oxygen consumption and an inability to increase the maximal oxygen uptake. A 0.3 unit decline in pH, representative of ocean acidification, caused the same percentage loss in aerobic scope as did a 3°C warming. Interfamilial differences in ability to cope aerobically with warming waters will likely lead to changes in the community structure on coral reefs with damselfish replacing cardinalfish. Concerning Britain, there is evidence of gradual warming and increased rainfall in winter months over a 150 year period, suggesting that British fish are already experiencing climate change. It was evident from an analysis of a 15 year dataset on fish populations in the River Thames, that cyprinid species displayed a different pattern in biomass and density to all the non-cyprinid fish population, suggesting that there will be interfamilial differences in responses to climate change. Using a Biological Indicator Approach on the three-spined stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus, a 2°C rise in water temperature resulted in a stress response at the cellular and whole organism level. A 6°C rise in temperature resulted in a stress response at the biochemical level (higher cortisol and glucose concentrations), cellular level (higher neutrophil: lymphocyte ratio) and whole organism level (higher ventilation rate and lowered condition factor, hepatosomatic index and growth). G. aculeatus is considered to be temperature tolerant; therefore these results indicate that climate change may prove to be stressful for more temperature-sensitive species. This study has demonstrated that climate change will have direct effects on fish populations, whether they are in temperate regions such as Britain or in tropical coral reefs, but with strong interfamilial differences in those responses.
author2 Sumpter, J
Johnson, A
format Thesis
author Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth
author_facet Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth
author_sort Crawley, Natalie Elizabeth
title The global impact of climate change on fish
title_short The global impact of climate change on fish
title_full The global impact of climate change on fish
title_fullStr The global impact of climate change on fish
title_full_unstemmed The global impact of climate change on fish
title_sort global impact of climate change on fish
publisher Brunel University Institute for the Environment PhD Theses
publishDate 2013
url http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7362
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/bitstream/2438/7362/1/FulltextThesis.pdf
http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/7362
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