Supplementary material from "Effects of hypoxia and ocean acidification on the upper thermal niche boundaries of coral reef fishes"

Rising ocean temperatures are predicted to cause a poleward shift in the distribution of marine fishes occupying the extent of latitudes tolerable within their thermal range boundaries. A prevailing theory suggests that the upper thermal limits of fishes are constrained by hypoxia and ocean acidific...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ern, Rasmus, Johansen, Jacob L., Rummer, Jodie L., Esbaugh, Andrew J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Figshare 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3810541.v1
https://figshare.com/collections/Supplementary_material_from_Effects_of_hypoxia_and_ocean_acidification_on_the_upper_thermal_niche_boundaries_of_coral_reef_fishes_/3810541/1
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Summary:Rising ocean temperatures are predicted to cause a poleward shift in the distribution of marine fishes occupying the extent of latitudes tolerable within their thermal range boundaries. A prevailing theory suggests that the upper thermal limits of fishes are constrained by hypoxia and ocean acidification. However, some eurythermal fish species do not conform to this theory, and maintain their upper thermal limits in hypoxia. Here we determine if the same is true for stenothermal species. In three coral reef fish species we tested the effect of hypoxia on upper thermal limits, measured as critical thermal maximum (CT max ). In one of these species we also quantified the effect of hypoxia on oxygen supply capacity, measured as aerobic scope (AS). In this species we also tested the effect of elevated CO 2 (simulated ocean acidification) on the hypoxia sensitivity of CT max . We found that CT max was unaffected by progressive hypoxia down to approximately 35 mmHg, despite a substantial hypoxia-induced reduction in AS. Below approximately 35 mmHg, CT max declined sharply with water oxygen tension ( P w O 2 ). Furthermore, the hypoxia sensitivity of CT max was unaffected by elevated CO 2 . Our findings show that moderate hypoxia and ocean acidification do not constrain the upper thermal limits of these tropical, stenothermal fishes.