Effects of temperature, body size, and sex on the standard metabolic rates of a sexually dimorphic freshwater piscivore, walleye (Sander vitreus)
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Walleye (Sander vitreus) are a sexually dimorphic freshwater piscivore that have long been studied using bioenergetics modeling, yet robust estimates of metabolic rates for use in those models have been lacking. Therefore, we quantified the effects of body mass, water temperature, and sex, on standard metabolic rate (SMR). We estimated SMR across temperatures ranging 0.5-24 °C using intermittent-flow respirometry for male (n = 54) and female (n = 53) walleye raised in hatchery conditions. We found a significant interaction between sex and temperature, whereby males had lower SMR below 16 °C, but increased such that SMR was ~16% higher than females at 22 °C. The mass-scaling coefficient, b, was similar for both sexes at a value around 1. These estimates of metabolic rate are the first to be generated using respirometry for adult walleye and differ slightly from those being used by previous bioenergetics models, which may have underestimated the energetic costs of SMR, and did not include sex-specific estimates for metabolism.
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