Not-So-Cold-Blooded Creatures
A new study finds that a rise in body temperature enables certain species of fish to maximize their swimming distance and speed
By Julie Cohen, UC Santa Barbara Current -- Wednesday, May 6, 2015
“In fact, the estimated cost of transport is twice as high, but in return they’re getting benefits from that increased swimming speed and wider range of migration,” she added. “We hypothesize these gains allow these endotherms to be more efficient hunters and to span larger areas in their migration, which probably provides feeding and reproduction benefits.”
A new study finds that a rise in body temperature enables certain species of fish to maximize their swimming distance and speed
By Julie Cohen, UC Santa Barbara Current -- Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Marine scientists have long known that some species of fish
possess a unique physiological characteristic — a web of arteries and veins
lying very close together — that enables them to raise their internal
temperatures higher than that of the water surrounding them.
Now, a new study by an international team of scientists that
includes UC Santa Barbara research biologist Jenn Caselle has demonstrated that
species possessing the ability to warm their core — a process called endothermy
— are able to swim two and a half times faster than those whose body
temperature doesn’t change. In addition, these species, which include some
sharks and tunas, can also swim twice as far — ranges comparable to those of
warm-blooded animals such as penguins and other marine mammals. The
researchers’ findings appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
“The cost of moving faster and farther is high so there has
to be an ecological reason that outweighs the physiological expenditure,”
Caselle said. “These endothermic fishes are putting a lot more energy into each
unit of movement than their cold-blooded counterparts are.
“In fact, the estimated cost of transport is twice as high, but in return they’re getting benefits from that increased swimming speed and wider range of migration,” she added. “We hypothesize these gains allow these endotherms to be more efficient hunters and to span larger areas in their migration, which probably provides feeding and reproduction benefits.”
To conduct the study, the team combined existing data with
new information they obtained by attaching sensors — designed and built by lead
author Yuuki Watanabe of Japan ’s
National Institute of Polar Research — to several sharks in different locations
around the world. The researchers’ analysis suggests that warmer “red” muscle
endothermy permits speedier cruising and greater endurance, which in turn
enables these fishes to swim long distances relatively quickly. This
characteristic, the marine scientists speculate, allows the fishes to take
advantage of seasonally variable food sources.
Of those examined in the study, four shark species are
endothermic — salmon, porbeagle, white and shortfin mako — as are five species
of tuna — yellow fin, southern bluefin, Atlantic bluefin, Pacific bluefin and
albacore. One species in particular, the white shark, has a migration range
greater than that of the humpback whale.
Of specific interest,
Caselle noted, is the fact that endothermy evolved independently in these
distinctly different groups of fishes. The two taxonomic groups diverged more
than 450 million years ago, and their common ancestor was most likely
cold-blooded. “The mechanisms of convergent evolution aren’t always the same,
although in this case they pretty much are,” Caselle said. “There are only a
limited number of ways a fish can rewire.
“This research begins to shed light on possible reasons why
these endothermic fish evolved in this way,” Caselle concluded. “Our paper
contains almost every piece of electronically recorded information in the
literature right now — and that’s not a lot. We’d like to be able to expand the
use of sensor-captured data to other groups of fishes in order to build a
dataset we could analyze to see what different species are doing in terms of
their movements and speed.”
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