Large fish often inhabit colder waters than small fish. Using a simple bioenergetic model, we found that the optimal temperature for growth should decrease with increasing body size. We predicted that this mechanism would produce an ontogenetic change in thermal preference and then tested our predictions with Pacific salmon, Oncorhynchus spp. In a laboratory experiment, the slope of a regression of growth increment on initial size became steeper with increasing temperature, so that the optimal temperature for growth decreased with increasing body size. In field observations, larger and older salmon inhabited cooler areas, whereas smaller and younger salmon inhabited warmer areas. These patterns were consistent with a size‐dependent effect of temperature on condition factor, a parameter shown experimentally to be a measure of the most recent growth performance. Temperatures for maximising condition factor were lower for larger fish. Thus, an ontogenetic change in individual thermal preference toward cooler areas maximises the growth performance of fish, and the negative effects of climate warming on growth are hypothesised to be more severe for larger fish.
Age-related thermal habitat use by sockeye Oncorhynchus nerka, chum Oncorhynchus keta and pink Oncorhynchus gorbuscha salmon was examined using trawl data obtained in spring in the North Pacific Ocean. Thermal habitat use differed by species and age. Larger and older fishes inhabited cooler areas, whereas smaller and younger fishes inhabited warmer areas.
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