Hi My Friends: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., If it's a small fish known as the Atlantic silverside (Menidia menidia), it can.
The
east coast of North America has one of the fastest water temperature
changes, which scientists call a thermal gradient, of any ocean or sea.
It plummets one degree Celsius for each degree of latitude.
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Where North Meets South in the Sea
Small fish adapt to cold, warm water temperatures along 2,000 miles of Atlantic Coast
July 24, 2012
The Atlantic Ocean off Nova Scotia ... and off Florida.
Along
some 2,000 miles, its waters go from icy to steamy. Can a marine
species live in both temperatures--and everywhere in between?
If it's a small fish known as the Atlantic silverside (Menidia menidia), it can.
The
east coast of North America has one of the fastest water temperature
changes, which scientists call a thermal gradient, of any ocean or sea.
It plummets one degree Celsius for each degree of latitude.
What
effect does this steep thermal gradient have on marine species that live
along the Atlantic Seaboard? How do they adapt to the extreme
differences?
A study by marine scientist David Conover, currently
director of the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s Division of Ocean
Sciences--along with Lyndie Hice and Tara Duffy of Stony Brook
University in Stony Brook, N.Y., and Stephan Munch of NOAA's Southwest
Fisheries Science Center in Santa Cruz, Calif.--shows that Atlantic
silversides reflect the drop in water temperature in changes in their
genetics.
Atlantic silversides range from the Gulf of St. Lawrence
in Canada to northeastern Florida in the U.S. Walk along any east coast
shoreline and you're likely to see one--or a school of them--flashing
silver in the shallows.
The fish are often found swimming in
brackish waters, such as near the mouths of rivers and streams that
connect with the sea. They're among the most common piscine residents of
the world's largest such estuary, Chesapeake Bay.
The small fish gather in salt marshes, which offer shelter for spawning and a haven from predators such as striped bass.
Atlantic
silversides fuel coastal food webs from north to south. They're also a
common subject of scientific research because of their sensitivity to
environmental changes.
Conover and colleagues recently published the results of their study of these ubiquitous fish in the journal Ecology Letters. Hice is the lead author.
The study, she says, is the most comprehensive look at genetic variation across latitudes in a marine species.
"The
Atlantic silverside is a fish that survives in a spectrum of water
temperatures. There's also extensive mixing of its populations
throughout its range. Scientists once assumed that all such populations
would have similar traits, but we found otherwise."
Despite a
blending of Atlantic silverside populations across latitudes, "the fish
show remarkable genetic differences over very short distances," says
Conover.
For example, the fish's maximum growth rate, and its
number of vertebrae, are different in populations as little as 60
kilometers (37 miles) apart.
Conover and colleagues conducted
experiments on Atlantic silversides from 39 locations along the fish's
3,000 kilometer (1,864 mile) range, mapping genetic variation in growth
rate, number of vertebrae and sex determination.
They initially
hypothesized that areas along the coastline where there are abrupt
changes in climate, such as at North Carolina's Cape Hatteras, would be
places where the traits of silversides would rapidly shift in concert.
Instead they found that each trait varied uniquely with latitude--and not necessarily where expected.
The growth rate of silversides, for example, is fastest in northernmost populations.
"These patterns tell us that natural selection appears to be acting independently on each trait," says Hice.
Relationships
between environmental gradients and local populations within a single
species, say the scientists, are more complex than anyone thought.
"Knowledge
of the conditions that lead to local adaptations in growth rate and
other traits," says Conover, "will improve management of marine species
and fish stocks--and our understanding of the effects of a changing
environment."
As water temperatures warm with climate change, what will happen to fish like Atlantic silversides?
"Understanding
how marine species adapt to changes in climate with latitude," says
Conover, tells us a lot about their capacity to weather climate change
in the future.
As climate and water temperatures warm, Atlantic
silversides may someday splash their way north as far as Newfoundland,
Labrador--and well beyond.
-- | Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov |
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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