TY - JOUR
T1 - Ocean warming and elevated carbon dioxide
T2 - Multiple stressor impacts on juvenile mussels from southern Chile
AU - Navarro, Jorge M.
AU - Duarte, Cristian
AU - Manríquez, Patricio H.
AU - Lardies, Marco A.
AU - Torres, Rodrigo
AU - Acuña, Karin
AU - Vargas, Cristian A.
AU - Lagos, Nelson A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to Elizabeth Encalada and Alejandro Ortíz for their assistance during the laboratory and fieldwork. Special thanks are due to the reviewers for very constructive comments on the manuscript. This study was mainly funded by the Programa de Investigación Asociativa, PIA CONICYT-CHILE (Grant Anillos ACT-132). Additional support came from FONDECYT Grant 1120470 to JMN and from Center FONDAP-CONICYT IDEAL 15150003. CAV is supported by Red Doctoral (REDOC.CTA) MINEDUC project UCO1202 at Universidad de Concepción.
Publisher Copyright:
© International Council for the Exploration of the Sea 2016. All rights reserved.
PY - 2016/3/1
Y1 - 2016/3/1
N2 - The combined effect of increased ocean warming and elevated carbon dioxide in seawater is expected to have significant physiological and ecological consequences at many organizational levels of the marine ecosystem. In the present study, juvenile mussels Mytilus chilensis were reared for 80 d in a factorial combination of two temperatures (12 and 168C) and three pCO2 levels (380, 700, and 1000 matm). We investigated the combined effects of increasing seawater temperature and pCO2 on the physiological performance (i.e. feeding, metabolism, and growth). Lower clearance rate (CR) occurred at the highest pCO2 concentration (1000 matm) compared with the control (380 matm) and with the intermediate concentration of pCO2 (700 matm). Conversely, CR was significantly higher at 168C than at 128C. Significant lower values of oxygen uptake were observed in mussels exposed to 1000 matm pCO2 level compared with those exposed to 380 matm pCO2. Scope for growth (SFG) was significantly lower at the highest pCO2 concentration compared with the control. Mussels exposed to 700 matm pCO2 did not show significantly different SFG from the other two pCO2 treatments. SFG was significantly higher at 168C than at 128C. This might be explained because the experimental mussels were exposed to temperatures experienced in their natural environment, which are within the range of thermal tolerance of the species. Our results suggest that the temperature rise within the natural range experienced by M. chilensis generates a positive effect on the processes related with energy gain (i.e. feeding and absorption) to be allocated to growth. In turn, the increase in the pCO2 level of 1000 matm, independent of temperature, adversely affects this species, with significantly reduced energy allocated to growth (SFG) compared with the control treatment.
AB - The combined effect of increased ocean warming and elevated carbon dioxide in seawater is expected to have significant physiological and ecological consequences at many organizational levels of the marine ecosystem. In the present study, juvenile mussels Mytilus chilensis were reared for 80 d in a factorial combination of two temperatures (12 and 168C) and three pCO2 levels (380, 700, and 1000 matm). We investigated the combined effects of increasing seawater temperature and pCO2 on the physiological performance (i.e. feeding, metabolism, and growth). Lower clearance rate (CR) occurred at the highest pCO2 concentration (1000 matm) compared with the control (380 matm) and with the intermediate concentration of pCO2 (700 matm). Conversely, CR was significantly higher at 168C than at 128C. Significant lower values of oxygen uptake were observed in mussels exposed to 1000 matm pCO2 level compared with those exposed to 380 matm pCO2. Scope for growth (SFG) was significantly lower at the highest pCO2 concentration compared with the control. Mussels exposed to 700 matm pCO2 did not show significantly different SFG from the other two pCO2 treatments. SFG was significantly higher at 168C than at 128C. This might be explained because the experimental mussels were exposed to temperatures experienced in their natural environment, which are within the range of thermal tolerance of the species. Our results suggest that the temperature rise within the natural range experienced by M. chilensis generates a positive effect on the processes related with energy gain (i.e. feeding and absorption) to be allocated to growth. In turn, the increase in the pCO2 level of 1000 matm, independent of temperature, adversely affects this species, with significantly reduced energy allocated to growth (SFG) compared with the control treatment.
KW - High CO2
KW - Multiple stressors
KW - Mussels
KW - Ocean warming
KW - Scope for growth
KW - Thermal window
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84962779807&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/icesjms/fsv249
DO - 10.1093/icesjms/fsv249
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84962779807
VL - 73
SP - 764
EP - 771
JO - ICES Journal of Marine Science
JF - ICES Journal of Marine Science
SN - 1054-3139
IS - 3
ER -