For nearly a century, scientists have tried to resolve the sensory physiology of chemical communication caused by predation stress. Only recently have we evidenced that abiotic stressors from a changing world, such as heat and ocean acidification, also trigger chemical communication between aquatic organisms – which we dubbed abiotic stress communication. Generally, the behavioural and physiological response to stress-induced cues are well understood, whereas the molecular mechanisms – cue identities, pathways of release, and perception – of this stress communication remain unresolved. Here, we propose a framework to organize the existing evidence for candidate mechanisms involved in abiotic stress-induced chemical communication, focusing on heat and acidification as two major abiotic stressors with environmental relevance. Drawing on transcriptomic, metabolomic and behavioural evidence, we propose that stressor-specific communication likely involves multiple cues and parallel routes rather than a single mechanism, such as membrane-related processes. We call for integrative work that links -omics with chemical profiling and ecological function assays to uncover the mechanisms of abiotic stress communication.
Li J., Feugere L., Hardege J., Vámos S. & Wollenberg Valero K. C., 2026. Chemical cues and molecular mechanisms suspected in abiotic stress communication. Journal of Experimental Biology 229: jeb251804. doi:10.1242/jeb.251804. Article.



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