Disturbance of primary producer communities disrupts the thermal limits of the associated aquatic fauna
Environmental predictability
Oxygen supersaturation
Climate Change
Temperature
Fresh Water
Aquatic ecosystem
15. Life on land
Invertebrates
Heat tolerance
Oxygen
Oxygen Supersaturation
13. Climate action
Human disturbance
Ecosystem function
Freshwater invertebrates
Animals
14. Life underwater
Freshwater Invertebrates
Environmental Predictability
Ecosystem
DOI:
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162135
Publication Date:
2023-02-11T01:52:59Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Environmental fluctuation forms a framework of variability within which species have evolved. Environmental fluctuation includes predictability, such as diel cycles of aquatic oxygen fluctuation driven by primary producers. Oxygen availability and fluctuation shape the physiological responses of aquatic animals to warming, so that, in theory, oxygen fluctuation could influence their thermal ecology. We describe annual oxygen variability in agricultural drainage channels and show that disruption of oxygen fluctuation through dredging of plants reduces the thermal tolerance of freshwater animals. We compared the temperature responses of snails, amphipods, leeches and mussels exposed to either natural oxygen fluctuation or constant oxygen in situ under different acclimation periods. Oxygen saturation in channel water ranged from c. 0 % saturation at night to >300 % during the day. Temperature showed normal seasonal variation and was almost synchronous with daily oxygen fluctuation. A dredging event in 2020 dramatically reduced dissolved oxygen variability and the correlation between oxygen and temperature was lost. The tolerance of invertebrates to thermal stress was significantly lower when natural fluctuation in oxygen availability was reduced and decoupled from temperature. This highlights the importance of natural cycles of variability and the need to include finer scale effects, including indirect biological effects, in modelling the ecosystem-level consequences of climate change. Furthermore, restoration and management of primary producers in aquatic habitats could be important to improve the thermal protection of aquatic invertebrates and their resistance to environmental variation imposed by climate change.
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