Cool ocean temperatures fail to buffer the impacts of heat exposure during low tide on the behaviour and physiology of a keystone predator
Lydia N. Walton,
Viola R. Watts,
Jasmin M. Schuster
et al.
Abstract:Air temperatures are warming at faster rates than ocean temperatures, and this land-sea warming contrast may create reprieves from thermal stress by providing cool underwater refugia during extreme heat events. Here we tested the impacts of the land-sea warming contrast on physiology (metabolism) and behaviour (feeding) in the juvenile life stage of a keystone intertidal predator,Pisaster ochraceus, by experimentally manipulating air (~20°C, 25°C, 30°C) and water (~15°C, 20°C) temperatures (at independent rate… Show more
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