Water temperature modulates multidimensional plastic responses to water flow during the ontogeny of a neotropical fish (Astyanax lacustris, characiformes)
Leandro Lofeu, Bianca Bonini-Campos, Tiana Kohlsdorf

TL;DR
This study shows how water temperature and flow together influence the development of a tropical fish, affecting its growth, body shape, and gene activity.
Contribution
The study reveals that water temperature modulates multidimensional plastic responses to water flow in fish ontogeny.
Findings
High temperature and water flow together significantly alter body shape and increase bmp4 gene expression.
Warmer environments with water flow lead to faster growth and earlier skeleton ossification in fish.
Plastic responses to water flow are restricted to specific thermal regimes.
Abstract
Plastic phenotypes result from multidimensional developmental systems responding to distinct yet simultaneous environmental signals, which may differently affect the magnitude and directions of plastic responses.Concomitant environmental signals during development may result in dominant, synergistic, or even antagonistic phenotypic effects, so that a given condition may amplify or minimize plastic responses to other environmental stimuli. Knowledge on how external information shapes complex plastic phenotypes is essential to predict potential evolutionary trajectories driven by developmental plasticity. Here, we manipulate water temperature to evaluate its effects on the well-described phenotypic accommodation of fish growth in the presence of water flow, using the neotropical species Astyanax lacustris. We include larval and juvenile ontogenetic stages to examine the interaction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCephalopods and Marine Biology · Fish biology, ecology, and behavior · Morphological variations and asymmetry
