Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes

Temperature influences the geographic range, physiology, and behavior of many ectothermic species, including the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. Thermal parameters were experimentally determined for wild-caught lionfish at different acclimation temperatures (13, 20, 25 and 32 °C). Preferences and avo...

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Published in:Biological Invasions
Main Authors: Barker, B. D., Horodysky, A. Z., Kerstetter, D. W.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UNF Digital Commons 2018
Subjects:
CTM
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/unf_faculty_publications/1709
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4
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spelling ftunivnflorida:oai:digitalcommons.unf.edu:unf_faculty_publications-2708 2024-09-09T19:57:39+00:00 Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes Barker, B. D. Horodysky, A. Z. Kerstetter, D. W. 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/unf_faculty_publications/1709 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4 unknown UNF Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/unf_faculty_publications/1709 doi:10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4 UNF Faculty Research and Scholarship CTM Pterois sp Shuttlebox Temperature preference Thermal tolerance text 2018 ftunivnflorida https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4 2024-07-22T04:05:34Z Temperature influences the geographic range, physiology, and behavior of many ectothermic species, including the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. Thermal parameters were experimentally determined for wild-caught lionfish at different acclimation temperatures (13, 20, 25 and 32 °C). Preferences and avoidance were evaluated using a videographic shuttlebox system, while critical thermal methodology evaluated tolerance. The lionfish thermal niche was compared experimentally to two co-occurring reef fishes (graysby Cephalopholis cruentata and schoolmaster Lutjanus apodus) also acclimated to 25 °C. The physiologically optimal temperature for lionfish is likely 28.7 ± 1 °C. Lionfish behavioral thermoregulation was generally linked to acclimation history; tolerance and avoidance increased significantly at higher acclimation temperatures, but final preference did not. The tolerance polygon of lionfish shows a strong correlation between thermal limits and acclimation temperature, with the highest CTmax at 39.5 °C and the lowest CTmin at 9.5 °C. The tolerance range of invasive lionfish (24.61 °C) is narrower than those of native graysby (25.25 °C) and schoolmaster (26.87 °C), mostly because of lower thermal maxima in the former. Results show that lionfish display “acquired†thermal tolerance at higher and lower acclimation temperatures, but are no more eurythermal than other tropical fishes. Collectively, these results suggest that while lionfish range expansion in the western Atlantic is likely over the next century from rising winter sea temperatures due to climate change, the magnitude of poleward radiation of this invasive species is limited and will likely be equivalent to native tropical and subtropical fishes with similar thermal minima. Text North Atlantic University of North Florida (UNF): Digital Commons Biological Invasions 20 1 45 58
institution Open Polar
collection University of North Florida (UNF): Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftunivnflorida
language unknown
topic CTM
Pterois sp
Shuttlebox
Temperature preference
Thermal tolerance
spellingShingle CTM
Pterois sp
Shuttlebox
Temperature preference
Thermal tolerance
Barker, B. D.
Horodysky, A. Z.
Kerstetter, D. W.
Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
topic_facet CTM
Pterois sp
Shuttlebox
Temperature preference
Thermal tolerance
description Temperature influences the geographic range, physiology, and behavior of many ectothermic species, including the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. Thermal parameters were experimentally determined for wild-caught lionfish at different acclimation temperatures (13, 20, 25 and 32 °C). Preferences and avoidance were evaluated using a videographic shuttlebox system, while critical thermal methodology evaluated tolerance. The lionfish thermal niche was compared experimentally to two co-occurring reef fishes (graysby Cephalopholis cruentata and schoolmaster Lutjanus apodus) also acclimated to 25 °C. The physiologically optimal temperature for lionfish is likely 28.7 ± 1 °C. Lionfish behavioral thermoregulation was generally linked to acclimation history; tolerance and avoidance increased significantly at higher acclimation temperatures, but final preference did not. The tolerance polygon of lionfish shows a strong correlation between thermal limits and acclimation temperature, with the highest CTmax at 39.5 °C and the lowest CTmin at 9.5 °C. The tolerance range of invasive lionfish (24.61 °C) is narrower than those of native graysby (25.25 °C) and schoolmaster (26.87 °C), mostly because of lower thermal maxima in the former. Results show that lionfish display “acquired†thermal tolerance at higher and lower acclimation temperatures, but are no more eurythermal than other tropical fishes. Collectively, these results suggest that while lionfish range expansion in the western Atlantic is likely over the next century from rising winter sea temperatures due to climate change, the magnitude of poleward radiation of this invasive species is limited and will likely be equivalent to native tropical and subtropical fishes with similar thermal minima.
format Text
author Barker, B. D.
Horodysky, A. Z.
Kerstetter, D. W.
author_facet Barker, B. D.
Horodysky, A. Z.
Kerstetter, D. W.
author_sort Barker, B. D.
title Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
title_short Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
title_full Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
title_fullStr Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
title_full_unstemmed Hot or not? Comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish Pterois sp. versus native western North Atlantic reef fishes
title_sort hot or not? comparative behavioral thermoregulation, critical temperature regimes, and thermal tolerances of the invasive lionfish pterois sp. versus native western north atlantic reef fishes
publisher UNF Digital Commons
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/unf_faculty_publications/1709
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source UNF Faculty Research and Scholarship
op_relation https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/unf_faculty_publications/1709
doi:10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-017-1511-4
container_title Biological Invasions
container_volume 20
container_issue 1
container_start_page 45
op_container_end_page 58
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