2023
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.4361
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Carryover effects of environmental stressors influence the life performance of brown trout

Abstract: Carryover effects of environmental stressors occur when experiences of the environment in earlier life stages or seasons influence the performance of individuals later in life. These can be especially critical for species that have diverse developmental transition periods in their life cycle, such as salmonid fish. Sublethal changes in metabolism, size, or growth experienced in early life stages may have a long‐lasting effect on the subsequent life performance of these species, but very few studies have formal… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…While overall vulnerability scores were similar, by dividing the green sea turtle life history into four stages, we identified higher vulnerabilities to specific stressors (e.g., inorganic pollution and marine heat waves) during earlier rather than later life stages. Mitigation of stressor impacts in early life stages is critical to avoid potentially harmful carry-over effects, which occur when an individual’s previous environmental experiences affects their current performance [ 28 , 67 ]. Carry-over effects may have negative effects, such as long-term sublethal effects that reduce resilience to future stressors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While overall vulnerability scores were similar, by dividing the green sea turtle life history into four stages, we identified higher vulnerabilities to specific stressors (e.g., inorganic pollution and marine heat waves) during earlier rather than later life stages. Mitigation of stressor impacts in early life stages is critical to avoid potentially harmful carry-over effects, which occur when an individual’s previous environmental experiences affects their current performance [ 28 , 67 ]. Carry-over effects may have negative effects, such as long-term sublethal effects that reduce resilience to future stressors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Carry-over effects may have negative effects, such as long-term sublethal effects that reduce resilience to future stressors. However, carry-over effects may also have positive effects, whereby individuals become more resilient to future stressors resulting in enhanced survival and reproductive output [ 28 , 67 ]. Carry-over effects may occur from as early as the egg stage in turtles [ 28 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many juvenile fish are particularly susceptible to overwinter mortality, with fish size and energetic condition influencing survival (Cunjak, 1996; Gosselin et al, 2021; Hurst, 2007; Shuter et al, 2012). However, fewer studies have investigated effects of stressors on those individuals that survive the event (i.e., sublethal impacts; e.g., Louhi et al, 2023; Saboret & Ingram, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%