Seawater carbonate chemistry and shoaling performance and lateralization of novel tropical–temperate fish shoals

Gregarious behaviours are common in animals and provide various benefits such as food acquisition and protection against predators. Many gregarious tropical species are shifting poleward under current ocean warming, creating novel species and social interactions with local temperate taxa. However, how the dynamics of these novel shoals might be altered by future ocean warming and acidification remains untested. Here we evaluate how novel species interactions, ocean acidification and warming affect shoaling dynamics, motor lateralization and boldness of range-extending tropical and co-shoaling temperate fishes under controlled laboratory conditions. Fishes were exposed to 1 of 12 treatments (combinations of three temperature levels, two pCO2 levels and two shoal type levels: mixed species or temperate only) for 38 days. Lateralization (a measure of asymmetric expression of cognitive function in group coordination and predator escape) of tropical and temperate species was right-side biased under present-day conditions, but side bias significantly diminished in tropical and temperate fishes under ocean acidification. Ocean acidification also decreased shoal cohesion irrespective of shoaling type, with mixed-species shoals showing significantly lower cohesion than temperate-only shoals irrespective of climate stressors. Tropical fish became bolder under ocean acidification (after 4 weeks), and temperate fish became bolder with increasing temperature, while ocean acidification dampened temperate fish boldness. Our findings highlight the direct effect of climate stressors on fish behaviour and the interplay with the indirect effects of novel species interactions. Because strong shoal cohesion and lateralization are key determinants of species fitness, their degradation under ocean warming and acidification could adversely affect species performance in novel assemblages in a future ocean, and might slow down tropical species range extensions.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Mitchell, Angus, Booth, David J, Nagelkerken, Ivan (2022). Dataset: Seawater carbonate chemistry and shoaling performance and lateralization of novel tropical–temperate fish shoals. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.941935

DOI retrieved: 2022

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.941935
Author Mitchell, Angus
Given Name Angus
Family Name Mitchell
More Authors
Booth, David J
Nagelkerken, Ivan
Source Creation 2022
Publication Year 2022
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Mitchell-etal_2021_GCB
Subject Areas
Name: BiologicalClassification

Name: Chemistry

Name: Ecology

Related Identifiers
Title: Ocean warming and acidification degrade shoaling performance and lateralization of novel tropical–temperate fish shoals
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16022
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2022
Source: Global Change Biology
Authors: Mitchell Angus , Booth David J , Nagelkerken Ivan , Mitchell Angus , Nagelkerken Ivan , Booth David J , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .

Title: Ocean warming and acidification degrade shoaling performance and lateralisation of novel tropical–temperate fish shoals
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.25909/17011619
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2021
Source: Figshare
Authors: Mitchell Angus , Booth David J , Nagelkerken Ivan , Mitchell Angus , Nagelkerken Ivan , Booth David J , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .

Title: seacarb: seawater carbonate chemistry with R. R package version 3.2.16
Identifier: https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/seacarb/index.html
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2021
Authors: Mitchell Angus , Booth David J , Nagelkerken Ivan , Mitchell Angus , Nagelkerken Ivan , Booth David J , Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James .