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Ocean acidification does not limit squid metabolism via blood oxygen supply.

Matthew A BirkErin L McLeanBrad A Seibel
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2018)
Ocean acidification is hypothesized to limit the performance of squid owing to their exceptional oxygen demand and pH sensitivity of blood-oxygen binding, which may reduce oxygen supply in acidified waters. The critical oxygen partial pressure (P crit), the P O2  below which oxygen supply cannot match basal demand, is a commonly reported index of hypoxia tolerance. Any CO2-induced reduction in oxygen supply should be apparent as an increase in P crit In this study, we assessed the effects of CO2 (46-143 Pa; 455-1410 μatm) on the metabolic rate and P crit of two squid species - Dosidicus gigas and Doryteuthis pealeii - through manipulative experiments. We also developed a model, with inputs for hemocyanin pH sensitivity, blood P CO2  and buffering capacity, that simulates blood oxygen supply under varying seawater CO2 partial pressures. We compare model outputs with measured P crit in squid. Using blood-O2 parameters from the literature for model inputs, we estimated that, in the absence of blood acid-base regulation, an increase in seawater P CO2  to 100 Pa (≈1000 μatm) would result in a maximum drop in arterial hemocyanin-O2 saturation by 1.6% at normoxia and a P crit increase of ≈0.5 kPa. Our live-animal experiments support this supposition, as CO2 had no effect on measured metabolic rate or P crit in either squid species.
Keyphrases
  • systematic review
  • dna damage
  • mass spectrometry
  • oxidative stress
  • high resolution
  • binding protein
  • diabetic rats
  • simultaneous determination