High temperature acclimation alters the emersion behavior in the crab Neohelice granulata

An increase in environmental temperature can deleteriously affect organisms. This study investigated whether the semiterrestrial estuarine crab Neohelice granulata uses emersion behavior as a resource to avoid thermal stress and survive higher aquatic temperatures. We also examined whether this beha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of thermal biology 2020-07, Vol.91, p.102617-10, Article 102617
Hauptverfasser: Halal, Lamia Marques, Ayres, Bruna Soares, Lima, Tábata Martins, Maciel, Fábio Everton, Nery, Luiz Eduardo Maia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:An increase in environmental temperature can deleteriously affect organisms. This study investigated whether the semiterrestrial estuarine crab Neohelice granulata uses emersion behavior as a resource to avoid thermal stress and survive higher aquatic temperatures. We also examined whether this behavior is modulated by exposure to high temperature; whether, during the period of emersion, the animal loses heat from the carapace to the medium; and whether this behavior is altered by the temperature at which the animal has been acclimated. The lethal temperature for 50% of the population (LT50) was determined through 96-h mortality curves in animals acclimated at 20 °C and 30 °C. The behavioral profile of N. granulata during thermal stress was based on monitoring crab movement in aerial, intermediary, and aquatic zones. Acclimation at a higher temperature and the possibility of emersion increased the thermotolerance of the crabs and the synergistic effect of acclimation temperature. The possibility of leaving the hot water further increased the resistance of these animals to thermal stress. We observed that when the crab was subjected to thermal stress conditions, it spent more time in the aerial environment, unlike under control conditions. Under the experimental conditions, it made small incursions into the aquatic environment and stayed in the aerial environment for a longer time in order to cool its body temperature. The animals acclimated at 20 °C and placed into water at 35 °C remained in the aerial zone. The animals acclimated and maintained at 30 °C (control) that were placed in water at 35 °C with the possibility of emerging into hot air transited more frequently between the aquatic and aerial zones than did the animals that were put in water at 35 °C with the possibility of emerging into a cooler air environment. We conclude that emergence behavior allows N. granulata to survive high temperatures and that this behavior is influenced by acclimation temperature. [Display omitted] •Possibility of emergence and thermal acclimation to 30 °C increased thermotolerance.•Crabs use the air environment to evade heat stress and cool body temperature.•Crabs acclimated to 30 °C made more incursions into the warm aquatic zone.
ISSN:0306-4565
1879-0992
DOI:10.1016/j.jtherbio.2020.102617