Habitat traits and food availability determine the response of marine invertebrates to ocean acidification

Energy availability and local adaptation are major components in mediating the effects of ocean acidification (OA) on marine species. In a long‐term study, we investigated the effects of food availability and elevated pCO₂ (ca. 400, 1000 and 3000 μatm) on growth of newly settled Amphibalanus (Balanu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global change biology 2014-03, Vol.20 (3), p.765-777
Hauptverfasser: Pansch, Christian, Schaub, Iris, Havenhand, Jonathan, Wahl, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Energy availability and local adaptation are major components in mediating the effects of ocean acidification (OA) on marine species. In a long‐term study, we investigated the effects of food availability and elevated pCO₂ (ca. 400, 1000 and 3000 μatm) on growth of newly settled Amphibalanus (Balanus) improvisus to reproduction, and on their offspring. We also compared two different populations, which were presumed to differ in their sensitivity to pCO₂ due to differing habitat conditions: Kiel Fjord, Germany (Western Baltic Sea) with naturally strong pCO₂ fluctuations, and the Tjärnö Archipelago, Sweden (Skagerrak) with far lower fluctuations. Over 20 weeks, survival, growth, reproduction and shell strength of Kiel barnacles were all unaffected by elevated pCO₂, regardless of food availability. Moulting frequency and shell corrosion increased with increasing pCO₂ in adults. Larval development and juvenile growth of the F1 generation were tolerant to increased pCO₂, irrespective of parental treatment. In contrast, elevated pCO₂ had a strong negative impact on survival of Tjärnö barnacles. Specimens from this population were able to withstand moderate levels of elevated pCO₂ over 5 weeks when food was plentiful but showed reduced growth under food limitation. Severe levels of elevated pCO₂ negatively impacted growth of Tjärnö barnacles in both food treatments. We demonstrate a conspicuously higher tolerance to elevated pCO₂ in Kiel barnacles than in Tjärnö barnacles. This tolerance was carried over from adults to their offspring. Our findings indicate that populations from fluctuating pCO₂ environments are more tolerant to elevated pCO₂ than populations from more stable pCO₂ habitats. We furthermore provide evidence that energy availability can mediate the ability of barnacles to withstand moderate CO₂ stress. Considering the high tolerance of Kiel specimens and the possibility to adapt over many generations, near future OA alone does not seem to present a major threat for A. improvisus.
ISSN:1354-1013
1365-2486
1365-2486
DOI:10.1111/gcb.12478