Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species

The early life history stages of fish are considered the most vulnerable and can be strongly affected by environmental variability, leading to population fluctuations. Temperature has a major role on development and mortality rates, with consequences for recruitment and overall stock productivity. W...

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Main Authors: Tsoukali, Stavroula, MacKenzie, Brian
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/8f42bf53-6b1f-421c-ab36-68126b6d43d3
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spelling ftdtupubl:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/8f42bf53-6b1f-421c-ab36-68126b6d43d3 2023-05-15T17:30:23+02:00 Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species Tsoukali, Stavroula MacKenzie, Brian 2014 https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/8f42bf53-6b1f-421c-ab36-68126b6d43d3 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Tsoukali , S & MacKenzie , B 2014 , ' Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species ' , ESSAS Annual Science Meeting , Copenhagen , Denmark , 07/04/2014 - 09/04/2014 . conferenceObject 2014 ftdtupubl 2022-08-14T08:18:19Z The early life history stages of fish are considered the most vulnerable and can be strongly affected by environmental variability, leading to population fluctuations. Temperature has a major role on development and mortality rates, with consequences for recruitment and overall stock productivity. We collated development and survival data from publications on laboratory egg incubation experiments to investigate and compare the development, daily mortality and survival of fish eggs from pelagic species in the north Atlantic at different temperatures, and to investigate whether trade-offs exist between these traits at the population and species level and between habitat types (pelagic and demersal). While differing in magnitude, the response of these traits exhibited similar trends with respect to temperature, regardless of species, population or habitat type. A trade-off appears between rapid development and high mortality or slow development and low mortality, resulting in similar survivorship percentages across species. These results quantify physiological effects of temperature on the eggs and are a major factor in yielding a close correspondence between the physiological optimum temperature for survivorship and observed temperature at spawning sites. Temperature during egg development may be a key evolutionary force affecting spawning time and location Conference Object North Atlantic Technical University of Denmark: DTU Orbit
institution Open Polar
collection Technical University of Denmark: DTU Orbit
op_collection_id ftdtupubl
language English
description The early life history stages of fish are considered the most vulnerable and can be strongly affected by environmental variability, leading to population fluctuations. Temperature has a major role on development and mortality rates, with consequences for recruitment and overall stock productivity. We collated development and survival data from publications on laboratory egg incubation experiments to investigate and compare the development, daily mortality and survival of fish eggs from pelagic species in the north Atlantic at different temperatures, and to investigate whether trade-offs exist between these traits at the population and species level and between habitat types (pelagic and demersal). While differing in magnitude, the response of these traits exhibited similar trends with respect to temperature, regardless of species, population or habitat type. A trade-off appears between rapid development and high mortality or slow development and low mortality, resulting in similar survivorship percentages across species. These results quantify physiological effects of temperature on the eggs and are a major factor in yielding a close correspondence between the physiological optimum temperature for survivorship and observed temperature at spawning sites. Temperature during egg development may be a key evolutionary force affecting spawning time and location
format Conference Object
author Tsoukali, Stavroula
MacKenzie, Brian
spellingShingle Tsoukali, Stavroula
MacKenzie, Brian
Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
author_facet Tsoukali, Stavroula
MacKenzie, Brian
author_sort Tsoukali, Stavroula
title Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
title_short Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
title_full Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
title_fullStr Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
title_full_unstemmed Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species
title_sort comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north atlantic pelagic fish species
publishDate 2014
url https://orbit.dtu.dk/en/publications/8f42bf53-6b1f-421c-ab36-68126b6d43d3
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Tsoukali , S & MacKenzie , B 2014 , ' Comparative impacts of temperature and trade-offs on egg ecology of north Atlantic pelagic fish species ' , ESSAS Annual Science Meeting , Copenhagen , Denmark , 07/04/2014 - 09/04/2014 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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