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Acidification and hypoxia interactively affect metabolism in embryos, but not larvae, of the coastal forage fish Menidia menidia.

Teresa G SchwemmerHannes BaumannChristopher S MurrayAdelle I MolinaJanet A Nye
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2020)
Ocean acidification is occurring in conjunction with warming and deoxygenation as a result of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Multistressor experiments are critically needed to better understand the sensitivity of marine organisms to these concurrent changes. Growth and survival responses to acidification have been documented for many marine species, but studies that explore underlying physiological mechanisms of carbon dioxide (CO2) sensitivity are less common. We investigated oxygen consumption rates as proxies for metabolic responses in embryos and newly hatched larvae of an estuarine forage fish (Atlantic silverside, Menidia menidia) to factorial combinations of CO2×temperature or CO2×oxygen. Metabolic rates of embryos and larvae significantly increased with temperature, but partial pressure of CO2 (P CO2 ) alone did not affect metabolic rates in any experiment. However, there was a significant interaction between P CO2  and partial pressure of oxygen (P O2 ) in embryos, because metabolic rates were unaffected by P O2  level at ambient P CO2 , but decreased with declining P O2  under elevated P CO2 For larvae, however, P CO2  and P O2  had no significant effect on metabolic rates. Our findings suggest high individual variability in metabolic responses to high P CO2 , perhaps owing to parental effects and time of spawning. We conclude that early life metabolism is largely resilient to elevated P CO2  in this species, but that acidification likely influences energetic responses and thus vulnerability to hypoxia.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • early life
  • climate change
  • endothelial cells
  • air pollution
  • aedes aegypti
  • drosophila melanogaster
  • risk assessment
  • rectal cancer
  • anaerobic digestion
  • genetic diversity