Differences in induced thermotolerance among populations of Olympia oysters.

Jillian M Bible, Tyler G Evans, Eric Sanford
Author Information
  1. Jillian M Bible: Bodega Marine Laboratory, 2099 Westshore Road, Bodega Bay, CA 94923, USA; Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA. Electronic address: jbible2@washcoll.edu.
  2. Tyler G Evans: Department of Biological Sciences, California State University East Bay, 25800 Carlos Bee Boulevard, Hayward, CA 94542, USA.
  3. Eric Sanford: Bodega Marine Laboratory, 2099 Westshore Road, Bodega Bay, CA 94923, USA; Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA.

Abstract

An organism's ability to cope with thermal stress is an important predictor of survival in a changing climate. One way in which organisms may acclimatize to thermal stress in the short-term is through induced thermotolerance, whereby exposure to a sublethal heat shock enables the organism to subsequently survive what might otherwise be a lethal event. Whether induced thermotolerance is related to basal thermotolerance is not well understood for marine organisms. Furthermore, whether populations often differ in their capacity for induced thermotolerance is also unclear. Here, we tested for differences in basal thermotolerance and induced thermotolerance among six populations of Olympia Oysters (Ostrea lurida) from three California estuaries. Oysters were raised under common-garden laboratory conditions for a generation and then exposed to two treatments (control or sublethal heat shock) followed by a spectrum of temperatures that bound the upper critical temperature in order to determine LT (temperature at which 50% of the population dies). All populations exhibited induced thermotolerance by increasing their LT to a similar maximum temperature when extreme thermal stress was preceded by a sublethal heat shock. However, populations differed in their basal thermotolerance and their plasticity in thermotolerance. Populations with the highest basal thermotolerance were least able to modify upper critical temperature, while the population with the lowest basal thermotolerance exhibited the greatest plasticity in the upper critical temperature. Our results highlight that populations with high basal thermotolerance may be most vulnerable to climate warming because they lack the plasticity required to adjust their upper thermal limits.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Acclimatization
Animals
Climate Change
Heat-Shock Response
Hot Temperature
Ostreidae
Thermotolerance

Word Cloud

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