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Experimental treatment, clutch size, fertilisation and hatch rates, and average egg diameter of clutches generated from parent generation during the experiment

Lengths of adult Gasterosteus aculeatus (parents) used for breeding

Egg sizes and clutch characteristics, including experimental treatment and individual egg diameter as well as overall clutch characteristics

Timing of breeding events during the experiment, including treatment group and clutch size

Hourly recorded water temperatures used in each of the three temperature treatments for parent and offspring fish (control/constant temperature, natural temperature variation, and increased temperature variation)

Survival of offspring up to 90 days post-hatch, formatted for Kaplan-Meyer analysis

Measurements of standard lengths of offspring at three stages during the experiment (30, 60, and 90 days post-hatch), as well as (parent & offspring) temperature treatment and density of fish in the tank

Growth, survival and morphometrics of intergenerational response to temperature variation in threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus)

Data gathered for a split-clutch experiment on intergenerational response to temperature variation in threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) between May-Nov 2021, at the laboratory in the Wadden Sea Station, Sylt (Germany; 55.020993, 8.437764). Parents were exposed to one of three temperature treatments (constant temperature, natural temperature variation, and increased temperature variation) for 2 months and then bred; clutches were split between the same three temperature treatments and monitored for 90 days post-hatch. Various characteristics were measured to assess the impact and interaction of both parent and offspring temperature variation treatment on offspring growth, survival, and development. Data include standard lengths of parent (n=92) and offspring (n=760) fish (collected using digital measurement of calibrated photographs), timing of breeding events, clutch and egg size, survival of offspring fish over 90 days post-hatch, morphological landmarks for morphometric analysis of offspring fish, and hourly temperatures of treatment conditions.

Microsatellite data of pipefish from six sampling locations in the southern Baltic Sea

In this experiment Syngnathus typhle individuals were collected at six different locations along the German Baltic Sea coastline. To analyse the populations structure of the pipefish we isolated genomic DNA from fin clips of collected pipefish female. All 144 female S. typhle samples were genotyped for 11 microsatellite loci, with a minimum of 20 individuals per sampling site. The allele report contains the microsatelite length of the three primer pools used for multiplex PCR. The report gives information, if indivuduals are homozygous (same allele length) or heterozygous (different allele length) for targeted alleles. Some samples were negelected due to too many missing alleles. Allele reports were uploaded in Microchecker and Genetix for analyses of the population structure.

Experiment on pipefish Syngnathus typhle to inhabit low salinity areas of the Baltic Sea

The aim of the study was to investigate the mechanisms allowing pipefish to inhabit low salinity areas of the Baltic Sea. The parental Syngnathus typhle generation for this experiment was caught in seagrass meadows of six sampling sites along the German coastline of the Baltic Sea in spring 2017, i.e. in the Flensburg Fjörd, Falckensteiner Strand, Orth Bay next to Fehmarn, Salzhaff and 2 sample sites around Rügen. Three sampling sites are characterized by relatively high salinity conditions (14 - 17 PSU; high salinity origin; H) and three sampling sites by relatively low salinity conditions (7 - 11 PSU; low salinity origin, L; Table 1). Salzhaff was assigned the category low because salinity drops are common after rainfall accompanied with freshwater discharge due to enclosed morphology of the inlet. Therefore, pipefish in Salzhaff are likely to be exposed to salinity levels below 10 PSU. A minimum of 30 non-pregnant males and 30 females were caught snorkelling with hand nets at each sampling site at depths ranging between 0.5 and 2.5 m. At each sampling site, water temperature and salinity were measured from water collected about 1 m below the surface using a salinometer (WTW Cond 330i). The common garden experiment was conducted at the facilities of the GEOMAR (west shore) in spring 2020.

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