首页> 外文期刊>Marine ecology progress series >Interactive effects of acidification, hypoxia, and thermal stress on growth, respiration, and survival of four North Atlantic bivalves
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Interactive effects of acidification, hypoxia, and thermal stress on growth, respiration, and survival of four North Atlantic bivalves

机译:酸化,缺氧和热应激对四个北大西洋双壳类动物的生长,呼吸和存活的相互作用

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We investigated the individual and interactive effects of coastal and climate change stressors (elevated temperatures, acidification, and hypoxia) on the growth, survival, and respiration rates of 4 commercially and ecologically important North Atlantic bivalves: bay scallops Argopecten irradians, Eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica, blue mussels Mytilus edulis, and hard clams Mercenaria mercenaria. Month-long experiments were performed on multiple cohorts of post-set juveniles using conditions commonly found during summer months within eutrophied, shallow, temperate, coastal environments (24-31 degrees C; 2-7 mg O-2 l(-1); pH(T), total scale, 7.2-8.0). Elevated temperatures most consistently altered the performance of the bivalves, with both positive and negative physiological consequences. Low levels of dissolved oxygen (DO) and pH individually reduced the survival, shell growth, and/or tissue weight of each bivalve, with A. irradians being the most vulnerable species. Low DO also significantly increased respiration rates of A. irradians and M. mercenaria, evidencing a compensatory physiological response to hypoxia. M. edulis and M. mercenaria both displayed size-dependent vulnerability to acidification, with smaller individuals being more susceptible. The combination of low DO and low pH often interacted antagonistically to yield growth rates higher than would be predicted from either individual stressor, potentially suggesting that some anaerobic metabolic pathways may function optimally under hypercapnia. Elevated temperature and low pH interacted both antagonistically and synergistically, producing outcomes that could not be predicted from the responses to individual stressors. Collectively, this study revealed species- and size-specific vulnerabilities of bivalves to coastal stressors along with unpredicted interactions among those stressors.
机译:我们调查了沿海和气候变化压力源(升高的温度,酸化和低氧)对4种商业和生态上重要的北大西洋双壳类动物的生长,存活和呼吸速率的个体和互动影响:海湾扇贝Argopecten irradians,东部牡蛎Crassostrea virginica ,青口贻贝和可乐蛤Mer。在夏季富营养化,浅水,温带,沿海环境(24-31摄氏度; 2-7 mg O-2 l(-1); pH(T),总水垢,7.2-8.0)。升高的温度最持续地改变双壳动物的性能,从而产生积极和消极的生理后果。低水平的溶解氧(DO)和pH值分别降低了每个双壳类动物的存活率,壳的生长和/或组织重量,其中弧菌是最易受伤害的物种。低溶解氧还显着提高了irradians菌和m.merenaria菌的呼吸速率,证明了对缺氧的补偿性生理反应。食用蓝藻和沙门氏菌都表现出大小依赖性的酸化脆弱性,较小的个体更易感染。低溶解氧和低pH值的组合经常产生拮抗作用,使生长速率高于任一单个应激源所预期的增长率,这可能暗示某些高氧血症患者的厌氧代谢途径可能发挥最佳作用。升高的温度和较低的pH值会产生拮抗作用和协同作用,产生无法通过对单个应激源的反应预测的结果。总的来说,这项研究揭示了双壳类对沿海应激源的特定物种和大小特定的脆弱性,以及这些应激源之间的不可预测的相互作用。

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