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Accepted Manuscript
Research Article
Thermal physiology of the fingered limpet Lottia digitalis under emersion and immersion
Brittany Bjelde, Anne Todgham
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 : jeb.084178 doi: 10.1242/jeb.084178 Published 11 April 2013
Brittany Bjelde
San Francisco State University
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Anne Todgham
San Francisco State University
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Summary

Marine animals living high in the rocky intertidal zone experience long durations of aerial-emersion, sometimes enduring rapid increases in temperature. To date, much of our understanding of the thermal physiology of intertidal organisms comes from studies in which organisms are exposed to increasing temperatures when immersed, with the added effect of aerial emersion rarely considered. In this study, we examined the physiological response of the finger limpet, Lottia digitalis, to increases in temperature under both immersed and emersed conditions. We investigated the thermal sensitivity and upper temperature tolerance of limpets through assessments of cardiac performance, metabolic rate, glycogen depletion and maintenance of protein integrity. Cardiac performance in response to ecologically relevant increases in temperature was similar in emersed and immersed limpets from 15 to 35°C and showed multiple break patterns in heart rate as temperature was increased. Overall, emersed limpets had a greater upper thermal limit on cardiac performance with the ability to maintain heart rate 3-5°C higher than immersed limpets. Metabolism in limpets also differed significantly between emersion and immersion, where a significant depression in aerobic metabolic rate was observed under immersion with increasing temperature. Greater levels of ubiquitin-conjugated proteins were found under emersed conditions compared to immersed limpets. Maintaining cardiac performance and aerobic metabolism to higher temperatures under emersed conditions is likely reflective of physiological adaptations to live in an aerially exposed environment. Measured field temperatures where fingered limpets were collected demonstrated that limpets have a narrow thermal safety margin for aerobic performance, and currently experience multiple days where summer temperatures might exceed their threshold limits.

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Accepted Manuscript
Research Article
Thermal physiology of the fingered limpet Lottia digitalis under emersion and immersion
Brittany Bjelde, Anne Todgham
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 : jeb.084178 doi: 10.1242/jeb.084178 Published 11 April 2013
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Accepted Manuscript
Research Article
Thermal physiology of the fingered limpet Lottia digitalis under emersion and immersion
Brittany Bjelde, Anne Todgham
Journal of Experimental Biology 2013 : jeb.084178 doi: 10.1242/jeb.084178 Published 11 April 2013

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