TY - JOUR
T1 - Metabolism drives distribution and abundance in extremophile fish
AU - White, Richard S.A.
AU - McHugh, Peter A.
AU - Glover, Chris N.
AU - McIntosh, Angus R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This project was funded by the Brian Mason Scientific and Technical Trust, http:// brianmasontrust.org/; and the New Zealand Department of Conservation, http://www.doc.govt. nz/. Richard White was supported by a University of Canterbury Masters Scholarship, and Chris Glover was supported by a Campus Alberta Innovates Program Research Chair during manuscript preparation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. We thank Mauricio Urbina, Alan Lilley, Simon Howard, Mike White and Fergus McIntosh for field and lab assistance, and advice. We also thank Dave Eastwood for helping with fish capture and Phil Jellyman for providing his banded kōkopu length-weight regression. We are grateful for the use of the University of Canterbury’s field station at Harihari. All procedures were approved by the University of Canterbury animal ethics committee (permit number 2010/23R).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 White et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - Differences in population density between species of varying size are frequently attributed to metabolic rates which are assumed to scale with body size with a slope of 0.75. This assumption is often criticised on the grounds that 0.75 scaling of metabolic rate with body size is not universal and can vary significantly depending on species and life-history. However, few studies have investigated how interspecific variation in metabolic scaling relationships affects population density in different sized species. Here we predict inter-specific differences in metabolism from niche requirements, thereby allowing metabolic predictions of species distribution and abundance at fine spatial scales. Due to the differences in energetic efficiency required along harsh-benign gradients, an extremophile fish (brown mudfish, Neochanna apoda) living in harsh environments had slower metabolism, and thus higher population densities, compared to a fish species (banded kōkopu, Galaxias fasciatus) in physiologically more benign habitats. Interspecific differences in the intercepts for the relationship between body and density disappeared when species mass-specific metabolic rates, rather than body sizes, were used to predict density, implying population energy use was equivalent between mudfish and kōkopu. Nevertheless, despite significant interspecific differences in the slope of the metabolic scaling relationships, mudfish and kōkopu had a common slope for the relationship between body size and population density. These results support underlying logic of energetic equivalence between different size species implicit in metabolic theory. However, the precise slope of metabolic scaling relationships, which is the subject of much debate, may not be a reliable indicator of population density as expected under metabolic theory.
AB - Differences in population density between species of varying size are frequently attributed to metabolic rates which are assumed to scale with body size with a slope of 0.75. This assumption is often criticised on the grounds that 0.75 scaling of metabolic rate with body size is not universal and can vary significantly depending on species and life-history. However, few studies have investigated how interspecific variation in metabolic scaling relationships affects population density in different sized species. Here we predict inter-specific differences in metabolism from niche requirements, thereby allowing metabolic predictions of species distribution and abundance at fine spatial scales. Due to the differences in energetic efficiency required along harsh-benign gradients, an extremophile fish (brown mudfish, Neochanna apoda) living in harsh environments had slower metabolism, and thus higher population densities, compared to a fish species (banded kōkopu, Galaxias fasciatus) in physiologically more benign habitats. Interspecific differences in the intercepts for the relationship between body and density disappeared when species mass-specific metabolic rates, rather than body sizes, were used to predict density, implying population energy use was equivalent between mudfish and kōkopu. Nevertheless, despite significant interspecific differences in the slope of the metabolic scaling relationships, mudfish and kōkopu had a common slope for the relationship between body size and population density. These results support underlying logic of energetic equivalence between different size species implicit in metabolic theory. However, the precise slope of metabolic scaling relationships, which is the subject of much debate, may not be a reliable indicator of population density as expected under metabolic theory.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85035219838&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0187597
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0187597
M3 - Journal Article
C2 - 29176819
AN - SCOPUS:85035219838
VL - 12
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 11
M1 - e0187597
ER -