Dickson Kathryn A, Graham Jeffrey B
Department of Biological Science, California State University, Fullerton, CA 92834-6850, USA.
Physiol Biochem Zool. 2004 Nov-Dec;77(6):998-1018. doi: 10.1086/423743.
Regional endothermy, the conservation of metabolic heat by vascular countercurrent heat exchangers to elevate the temperature of the slow-twitch locomotor muscle, eyes and brain, or viscera, has evolved independently among several fish lineages, including lamnid sharks, billfishes, and tunas. All are large, active, pelagic species with high energy demands that undertake long-distance migrations and move vertically within the water column, thereby encountering a range of water temperatures. After summarizing the occurrence of endothermy among fishes, the evidence for two hypothesized advantages of endothermy in fishes, thermal niche expansion and enhancement of aerobic swimming performance, is analyzed using phylogenetic comparisons between endothermic fishes and their ectothermic relatives. Thermal niche expansion is supported by mapping endothermic characters onto phylogenies and by combining information about the thermal niche of extant species, the fossil record, and paleoceanographic conditions during the time that endothermic fishes radiated. However, it is difficult to show that endothermy was required for niche expansion, and adaptations other than endothermy are necessary for repeated diving below the thermocline. Although the convergent evolution of the ability to elevate slow-twitch, oxidative locomotor muscle temperatures suggests a selective advantage for that trait, comparisons of tunas and their ectothermic sister species (mackerels and bonitos) provide no direct support of the hypothesis that endothermy results in increased aerobic swimming speeds, slow-oxidative muscle power, or energetic efficiency. Endothermy is associated with higher standard metabolic rates, which may result from high aerobic capacities required by these high-performance fishes to conduct many aerobic activities simultaneously. A high standard metabolic rate indicates that the benefits of endothermy may be offset by significant energetic costs.
区域内温性,即通过血管逆流热交换器保存代谢热,以提高慢肌运动肌、眼睛、大脑或内脏的温度,在包括鼠鲨、旗鱼和金枪鱼在内的几个鱼类谱系中独立进化。这些鱼类都是大型、活跃的远洋物种,能量需求高,进行长距离洄游并在水柱中垂直移动,因此会遇到一系列水温。在总结了鱼类中内温性的出现情况后,利用吸热鱼类与其外温性亲属之间的系统发育比较,分析了鱼类内温性的两个假设优势的证据,即热生态位扩展和有氧游泳性能的增强。通过将吸热特征映射到系统发育树上,并结合有关现存物种的热生态位、化石记录以及吸热鱼类辐射时期的古海洋学条件的信息,支持了热生态位扩展。然而,很难证明生态位扩展需要内温性,并且除了内温性之外的适应对于在温跃层以下反复潜水也是必要的。尽管提高慢肌、氧化运动肌温度的能力趋同进化表明该特征具有选择优势,但对金枪鱼及其外温性姐妹物种(鲭鱼和狐鲣)的比较并没有直接支持内温性导致有氧游泳速度增加、慢氧化肌力量或能量效率提高这一假设。内温性与较高的标准代谢率相关,这可能是由于这些高性能鱼类同时进行许多有氧活动所需的高有氧能力所致。高的标准代谢率表明内温性的好处可能会被巨大的能量成本所抵消。