2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2006.01123.x
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Effect of temperature changes on the reproductive cycle of roach in Lake Geneva from 1983 to 2001

Abstract: In Lake Geneva, the surface water temperature has increased by 1°C over 20 years probably as a result of climate change. The effects of changes in temperature on the reproductive cycle of the roach Rutilus rutilus were assessed in a 19 year survey. Over time, spawning tended to begin earlier. The consequences of temperature changes were assessed on two different stages of the female reproductive cycle: the development of the ovaries from the beginning of autumn to ovulation, and the onset of the spawning perio… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(88 citation statements)
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“…By combining all trends, we obtained similar warming of the LG epilimnion (∼ +0. Gillet and Quétin, 2006). The historical effect of increased air temperature caused ∼ 40 to ∼ 70 % of the heating in the epilimnion/metalimnion and ∼ 240 % in the hypolimnion.…”
Section: Model Reliabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By combining all trends, we obtained similar warming of the LG epilimnion (∼ +0. Gillet and Quétin, 2006). The historical effect of increased air temperature caused ∼ 40 to ∼ 70 % of the heating in the epilimnion/metalimnion and ∼ 240 % in the hypolimnion.…”
Section: Model Reliabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The upper boundary tolerated is 31°C according to Cocking (1959) (IULT maximum of 20°C). The optimum temperature for roach reproduction lies between 10°C (L'Abbée-Lund and Vøllestad, 1985 in Gillet, 1989 in Scandinavia;Easton andDolben, 1980 in Gillet andQuétin, 2006) and 18°C (Spillmann, 1961;Holcik andHruska, 1966 in Gillet andQuétin, 2006); this range is confirmed by seven references to optimum temperatures (Easton andDolben, 1980 in Gillet, 1989;Mills, 1981in Gillet, 1989Elliott, 1994;Poncin, 1996;Diamond, 1985 in the UK in Gillet and Quétin, 2006;Teletchea et al, 2009b). The lower boundary temperature given is around 7°C (Mann, 1996;Noges and Jarvet, 2005 in Estonia) and the upper boundary temperature around 22°C (Gillet and Quétin, 2006 on Lake Geneva).…”
Section: Roach (Rutilus Rutilus)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because body temperature influences the speed of all metabolic processes, the ambient temperature affects various physiological processes, such as protein expression and binding (Deane and Woo, 2005;Huber and Guderley, 1993), blood circulation (Aguiar et al, 2002;Lecklin et al, 1995), respiration (Sollid et al, 2005), hormonal activity (Fortune, 1958), the immune system (Le Morvan et al, 1998) and behavior (Cossins et al, 1977;Friedlander et al, 1976;McCormick et al, 2002;Zitek et al, 2004). In addition, ambient temperature is also known to affect several parameters directly related to reproductive fitness, such as growth (Dembski et al, 2006;Hall and Johnston, 2003), egg size (Gillet and Quétin, 2006;Kokita, 2003) and life span (Dembski et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%