“…Gleason et al (2018) found that the thermal performance of both high-and low-zone juvenile mussels' (as assessed by the temperature at which 50% of mussels died, LT 50 ) decreased after 28 days of constant submersion, while the LT 50 of adult mussels did not change (Gleason et al, 2018). Research on other organisms suggests that adult mussels with different thermal histories might respond differently to constant submersion (Burggren, 2018;Jimenez et al, 2015;Wang et al, 2019;Williams and Somero, 1996) an avenue that Gleason et al (2018) explored only in juvenile, but not adult, mussels. Moreover, based on previous literature in other ectotherms like fish (Corey et al, 2017;Healy and Schulte, 2012;Huey and Bennett, 1990), it may take longer than the 28 days of constant submersion used by Gleason et al (2018) to cause a downward shift in thermal performance, and whereas LT 50 values may change with constant submersion, it is unclear whether constant submersion affects cardiac thermal performance, a trait which (unlike LT 50 , i.e.…”