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Sub-lethal predatory shell damage does not affect physiologyunder high CO2 in the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata. / Yokoyama, Leonardo; Turra, Alexander; Suckling, Coleen et al.
In: Ocean and Coastal Management, Vol. 68, e20274, 2020.

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Yokoyama, L., Turra, A., Suckling, C., Torres, G., Davies, A., & McCarthy, I. (2020). Sub-lethal predatory shell damage does not affect physiologyunder high CO2 in the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata. Ocean and Coastal Management, 68, Article e20274. https://doi.org/10.1590/s2675-28242020068274

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Yokoyama L, Turra A, Suckling C, Torres G, Davies A, McCarthy I. Sub-lethal predatory shell damage does not affect physiologyunder high CO2 in the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata. Ocean and Coastal Management. 2020;68:e20274. Epub 2020 Jun 12. doi: 10.1590/s2675-28242020068274

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Yokoyama, Leonardo ; Turra, Alexander ; Suckling, Coleen et al. / Sub-lethal predatory shell damage does not affect physiologyunder high CO2 in the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata. In: Ocean and Coastal Management. 2020 ; Vol. 68.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sub-lethal predatory shell damage does not affect physiologyunder high CO2 in the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata

AU - Yokoyama, Leonardo

AU - Turra, Alexander

AU - Suckling, Coleen

AU - Torres, Gabriela

AU - Davies, Andrew

AU - McCarthy, Ian

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Ocean acidification (OA) poses a major threat to marine animals, especially marine shelled invertebrates such as molluscs. Although many organisms are capable of compensating for the effects of OA, this can impose physiological costs and impact performance (e.g. through increased metabolism and decreased growth). Sublethal injuries on shells may provoke changes in energy allocation. Under acidified conditions, organisms would spend less energy on reproduction and somatic growth to repair the damage. Therefore, we analysed the physiological responses of the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata during shell regeneration under OA conditions. We simulated a sub-lethal predation event (a notch in the outer lip of the shell) and individuals were exposed to control (pH 8.08) and low pH scenarios (pH 7.88 and 7.65). After two months exposure, all individuals showed shell repair, with a full repair rate observed in 75% of individuals. Contrary to expectations, shell repair following sub-lethal damage and OA had no apparent impact on physiological state in terms of energy reserves (as measured by whole-animal Carbon/Nitrogen) or growth potential (as measured by whole-animal RNA:Protein and RNA:DNA ratios). As an intertidal organism, T. reticulata could be resilient to future global environmentalchange because of compensatory mechanisms that are inherent in intertidal animals, and may represent a robust species with which to study future scenarios of OA in temperate coastal ecosystems. However, unrestricted food availability during experiment could have played a role in the results and therefore food limitation should be considered in future studies regarding shell repair and metabolism under the effects of OA.

AB - Ocean acidification (OA) poses a major threat to marine animals, especially marine shelled invertebrates such as molluscs. Although many organisms are capable of compensating for the effects of OA, this can impose physiological costs and impact performance (e.g. through increased metabolism and decreased growth). Sublethal injuries on shells may provoke changes in energy allocation. Under acidified conditions, organisms would spend less energy on reproduction and somatic growth to repair the damage. Therefore, we analysed the physiological responses of the intertidal gastropod Tritia reticulata during shell regeneration under OA conditions. We simulated a sub-lethal predation event (a notch in the outer lip of the shell) and individuals were exposed to control (pH 8.08) and low pH scenarios (pH 7.88 and 7.65). After two months exposure, all individuals showed shell repair, with a full repair rate observed in 75% of individuals. Contrary to expectations, shell repair following sub-lethal damage and OA had no apparent impact on physiological state in terms of energy reserves (as measured by whole-animal Carbon/Nitrogen) or growth potential (as measured by whole-animal RNA:Protein and RNA:DNA ratios). As an intertidal organism, T. reticulata could be resilient to future global environmentalchange because of compensatory mechanisms that are inherent in intertidal animals, and may represent a robust species with which to study future scenarios of OA in temperate coastal ecosystems. However, unrestricted food availability during experiment could have played a role in the results and therefore food limitation should be considered in future studies regarding shell repair and metabolism under the effects of OA.

KW - Ocean acidification

KW - Metabolism

KW - Intertidal

KW - Gastropod

KW - hell repair

U2 - 10.1590/s2675-28242020068274

DO - 10.1590/s2675-28242020068274

M3 - Article

VL - 68

JO - Ocean and Coastal Management

JF - Ocean and Coastal Management

SN - 0964-5691

M1 - e20274

ER -