Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/20089
Title: GLOBAL WARMING EFFECTS ON ECTOTHERM SPECIES
Authors: PSNZ
Keywords: carbon
ecological stoichiometry
gross growth efficiency
growth
metabolism
nutrients
phosphorus
respiration
thermal gradient
threshold elemental ratio
Issue Date: 26-May-2024
Publisher: Universiti Malaysia Terengganu
Abstract: In light of ongoing climate change, it is increasingly important to know how nutritional requirements of ectotherms are affected by changing temperatures. Here, we analyse the wide thermal response of phosphorus (P) requirements via elemental gross growth efficiencies of Carbon (C) and P, and the Threshold Elemental Ratios in different aquatic invertebrate ectotherms: the freshwater model species Daphnia magna, the marine copepod Acartia tonsa, the marine heterotrophic dinoflagellate Oxyrrhis marina, and larvae of two populations of the marine crab Carcinus maenas. We show that they all share a non-linear cubic thermal response of nutrient requirements. Phosphorus requirements decrease from low to intermediate temperatures, increase at higher temperatures and decrease again when temperature is excessive. This common thermal response of nutrient requirements is of great importance if we aim to understand or even predict how ectotherm communities will react to global warming and nutrientdriven eutrophication.
URI: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/20089
Appears in Collections:SDI UMT 2024

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