2013
DOI: 10.1134/s1063074013020041
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Role of temperature in regulation of the life cycle of temperate fish

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The role of temperature regulating fish metabolism, reproduction, development and other adaptive responses has been widely reported (155). Temperature tolerance in fish has been linked with global warming issues (156) and nutritional factors such as dietary lipids (157).…”
Section: Light and Temperature Stressors During Early Development Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The role of temperature regulating fish metabolism, reproduction, development and other adaptive responses has been widely reported (155). Temperature tolerance in fish has been linked with global warming issues (156) and nutritional factors such as dietary lipids (157).…”
Section: Light and Temperature Stressors During Early Development Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The finding of fossil pharyngeal plates belonging to S. cretense in MIS 5e sediments does not necessarily preclude the hypothesis that this species locally disappeared during the Last Glaciation, only to recolonize the archipelago post-glacially. Nevertheless, we consider it more plausible to argue that such extirpation did not happen, taking into consideration the facts that: (1) detailed studies on the Azorean MIS 5e and recent marine molluscs showed that the drop of the SSTs during the Last Glaciation only affected two groups of species: the tropical species that reached the Azores probably during a 'window of opportunity' associated with the final phase of Termination 2, and bivalve species associated to fine-sand sediments; both groups were extirpated (Ávila et al 2008a, b, 2009b, 2015b); (2) as temperature is known to play a key role on marine fish species biology (Pepin, 1991;van der Kraak & Pankhurst, 1997;Pankhurst & Porter, 2003;Dolomatova et al 2013;Poloczanska et al 2016) and, in light of previously published theories (Ávila et al 2008a, 2009b, 2015b), the drop of SSTs was not sufficient enough to severely affect the survival, growth and reproduction of the temperate parrotfish S. cretense in the Azores during the Last Glacial episode; and (3) if S. cretense was a post-glacial colonizer of the Azores, the genetic diversity of the Azorean populations should be low in comparison to southern Madeiran populations (postulated to have been unaffected by the drop of SSTs); that is not the case, however, as pointed out by Domingues et al (2008). Combining our palaeontological data with ecological and genetic data from other authors (Abecasis et al 2008;Afonso et al 2008;Domingues et al 2008), we therefore believe the most plausible scenario is the survival of most (if not all) temperate and subtropical fish species in the Azores during the Last Glacial episode, as long as their ecological traits were not constrained to sandy habitats.…”
Section: Molluscamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Temperature is one of the most important abiotic factors of the environment; the adaptation of living organisms to temperature is achieved through the implementation of various physiological and biochemical mechanisms [10,27]. There are many studies on the effect of temperature on the body of Teleostei representatives in whole and on the blood of animals of this hyperorder in particular: the changes in their heat resistance, growth dynamics, and life cycle were studied [3,11,18]; physiological and physicochemical properties of blood cells under the influence of high and low incubation temperatures were revealed in experiments in vitro [14,15]. However, questions related to the key aspects of the effect of the temperature factor on a number of other parameters of hemocytes in representatives of teleost fish have not been studied.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%