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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(38): e2201521119, 2022 09 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36095205

RESUMO

Metazoan adaptation to global change relies on selection of standing genetic variation. Determining the extent to which this variation exists in natural populations, particularly for responses to simultaneous stressors, is essential to make accurate predictions for persistence in future conditions. Here, we identified the genetic variation enabling the copepod Acartia tonsa to adapt to experimental ocean warming, acidification, and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA) over 25 generations of continual selection. Replicate populations showed a consistent polygenic response to each condition, targeting an array of adaptive mechanisms including cellular homeostasis, development, and stress response. We used a genome-wide covariance approach to partition the allelic changes into three categories: selection, drift and replicate-specific selection, and laboratory adaptation responses. The majority of allele frequency change in warming (57%) and OWA (63%) was driven by shared selection pressures across replicates, but this effect was weaker under acidification alone (20%). OWA and warming shared 37% of their response to selection but OWA and acidification shared just 1%, indicating that warming is the dominant driver of selection in OWA. Despite the dominance of warming, the interaction with acidification was still critical as the OWA selection response was highly synergistic with 47% of the allelic selection response unique from either individual treatment. These results disentangle how genomic targets of selection differ between single and multiple stressors and demonstrate the complexity that nonadditive multiple stressors will contribute to predictions of adaptation to complex environmental shifts caused by global change.


Assuntos
Adaptação Fisiológica , Copépodes , Ácidos/química , Adaptação Fisiológica/genética , Animais , Copépodes/genética , Copépodes/fisiologia , Genômica , Aquecimento Global , Homeostase , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Oceanos e Mares
2.
Proc Biol Sci ; 290(2006): 20231033, 2023 09 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37670582

RESUMO

Phenotypic plasticity and evolutionary adaptation allow populations to cope with global change, but limits and costs to adaptation under multiple stressors are insufficiently understood. We reared a foundational copepod species, Acartia hudsonica, under ambient (AM), ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA) conditions for 11 generations (approx. 1 year) and measured population fitness (net reproductive rate) derived from six life-history traits (egg production, hatching success, survival, development time, body size and sex ratio). Copepods under OW and OWA exhibited an initial approximately 40% fitness decline relative to AM, but fully recovered within four generations, consistent with an adaptive response and demonstrating synergy between stressors. At generation 11, however, fitness was approximately 24% lower for OWA compared with the AM lineage, consistent with the cost of producing OWA-adapted phenotypes. Fitness of the OWA lineage was not affected by reversal to AM or low food environments, indicating sustained phenotypic plasticity. These results mimic those of a congener, Acartia tonsa, while additionally suggesting that synergistic effects of simultaneous stressors exert costs that limit fitness recovery but can sustain plasticity. Thus, even when closely related species experience similar stressors, species-specific costs shape their unique adaptive responses.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Animais , Aptidão Genética , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Água do Mar , Fenótipo
3.
J Therm Biol ; 117: 103712, 2023 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37714113

RESUMO

Parasitism has strong effects on community dynamics. Given the detrimental effects parasites have on host health, infection or infestation might be expected to reduce upper thermal limits, increasing the vulnerability of host species to future climate change. Copepods are integral components of aquatic food webs and biogeochemical cycles. They also serve as intermediate hosts in the life cycle of parasitic isopods in the family Bopyridae. As both copepods and isopod parasites play important roles in aquatic communities, it is important to understand how the interaction between parasite and host affects thermal limits in order to better predict how community dynamics may change in a warming climate. Here we examined the effect of infestation by larvae of a bopyrid isopod on the cosmopolitan copepod Acartia tonsa to test the hypothesis that infestation reduces thermal limits. To aid with this work, we developed an affordable, highly portable system for measuring critical thermal maxima of small ectotherms. We also used meta-analysis to summarize the effects of parasitism on critical thermal maxima in a wider range of taxa to help contextualize our findings. Contrary to both our hypothesis and the results of previous studies, we observed no reduction of thermal limits by parasitism in A. tonsa. These results suggest that life history of the host and parasite may interact to determine how parasite infestation affects environmental sensitivity.

4.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1944): 20202480, 2021 02 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33563117

RESUMO

Induced prey defences against consumers are conspicuous in microbes, plants and animals. In toxigenic prey, a defence fitness cost should result in a trade-off between defence expression and individual growth. Yet, previous experimental work has failed to detect such induced defence cost in toxigenic phytoplankton. We measured a potential direct fitness cost of grazer-induced toxin production in a red tide dinoflagellate prey using relative gene expression (RGE) of a mitotic cyclin gene (cyc), a marker that correlates to cell growth. This approach disentangles the reduction in cell growth from the defence cost from the mortality by consumers. Treatments where the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella were exposed to copepod grazers significantly increased toxin production while decreasing RGE of cyc, indicating a defence-growth trade-off. The defence fitness cost represents a mean decrease of the cell growth rate of 32%. Simultaneously, we estimate that the traditional method to measure mortality loss by consumers is overestimated by 29%. The defence appears adaptive as the prey population persists in quasi steady state after the defence is induced. Our approach provides a novel framework to incorporate the fitness cost of defence in toxigenic prey-consumer interaction models.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Dinoflagellida , Animais , Dinoflagellida/genética , Expressão Gênica , Proliferação Nociva de Algas , Fitoplâncton
5.
Biol Lett ; 17(7): 20210071, 2021 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34256577

RESUMO

The ocean is undergoing warming and acidification. Thermal tolerance is affected both by evolutionary adaptation and developmental plasticity. Yet, thermal tolerance in animals adapted to simultaneous warming and acidification is unknown. We experimentally evolved the ubiquitous copepod Acartia tonsa to future combined ocean warming and acidification conditions (OWA approx. 22°C, 2000 µatm CO2) and then compared its thermal tolerance relative to ambient conditions (AM approx. 18°C, 400 µatm CO2). The OWA and AM treatments were reciprocally transplanted after 65 generations to assess effects of developmental conditions on thermal tolerance and potential costs of adaptation. Treatments transplanted from OWA to AM conditions were assessed at the F1 and F9 generations following transplant. Adaptation to warming and acidification, paradoxically, reduces both thermal tolerance and phenotypic plasticity. These costs of adaptation to combined warming and acidification may limit future population resilience.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Aclimatação , Adaptação Fisiológica , Animais , Mudança Climática , Aquecimento Global , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Oceanos e Mares , Água do Mar , Temperatura
6.
Glob Chang Biol ; 25(12): 4147-4164, 2019 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31449341

RESUMO

Differences in population vulnerability to warming are defined by spatial patterns in thermal adaptation. These patterns may be driven by natural selection over spatial environmental gradients, but can also be shaped by gene flow, especially in marine taxa with high dispersal potential. Understanding and predicting organismal responses to warming requires disentangling the opposing effects of selection and gene flow. We begin by documenting genetic divergence of thermal tolerance and developmental phenotypic plasticity. Ten populations of the widespread copepod Acartia tonsa were collected from sites across a large thermal gradient, ranging from the Florida Keys to Northern New Brunswick, Canada (spanning over 20° latitude). Thermal performance curves (TPCs) from common garden experiments revealed local adaptation at the sampling range extremes, with thermal tolerance increasing at low latitudes and decreasing at high latitudes. The opposite pattern was observed in phenotypic plasticity, which was strongest at high latitudes. No relationship was observed between phenotypic plasticity and environmental variables. Instead, the results are consistent with the hypothesis of a trade-off between thermal tolerance and the strength of phenotypic plasticity. Over a large portion of the sampled range, however, we observed a remarkable lack of differentiation of TPCs. To examine whether this lack of divergence is the result of selection for a generalist performance curve or constraint by gene flow, we analyzed cytochrome oxidase I mtDNA sequences, which revealed four distinct genetic clades, abundant genetic diversity, and widely distributed haplotypes. Strong divergence in thermal performance within genetic clades, however, suggests that the pace of thermal adaptation can be relatively rapid. The combined insight from the laboratory physiological experiments and genetic data indicate that gene flow constrains differentiation of TPCs. This balance between gene flow and selection has implications for patterns of vulnerability to warming. Taking both genetic differentiation and phenotypic plasticity into account, our results suggest that local adaptation does not increase vulnerability to warming, and that low-latitude populations in general may be more vulnerable to predicted temperature change over the next century.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Adaptação Fisiológica , Animais , Canadá , Florida , Genética Populacional , Temperatura
7.
Harmful Algae ; 134: 102625, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38705619

RESUMO

There is a concern that harmful algal bloom (HAB) species may increase under climate change. Yet, we lack understanding of how ecological interactions will be affected under ocean warming and acidification (OWA) conditions. We tested the antagonistic effects of three strains of the dinoflagellate HAB species Alexandrium catenella on three target species (the chlorophyte Tetraselmis sp., the cryptomonad Rhodomonas salina, and the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii) at various biomass ratios between species, at ambient (16 °C and 400 µatm CO2) and OWA (20 °C and 2000 µatm CO2) conditions. In these experiments the Alexandrium strains had been raised under OWA conditions for ∼100 generations. All three non-HAB species increased their growth rate under OWA relative to ambient conditions. Growth rate inhibition was evident for R. salina and Tetraselmis sp. under OWA conditions, but not under ambient conditions. These negative effects were exacerbated at higher concentrations of Alexandrium relative to non-HAB species. By contrast, T. weissflogii showed positive growth in the presence of two strains of Alexandrium under ambient conditions, whereas growth was unaffected under OWA. Contrary to our expectations, A. catenella had a slight negative response in the presence of the diatom. These results demonstrate that Alexandrium exerts higher antagonistic effects under OWA compared to ambient conditions, and these effects are species-specific and density dependent. These negative effects may shift phytoplankton community composition under OWA conditions.


Assuntos
Dinoflagellida , Dinoflagellida/fisiologia , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Água do Mar/química , Proliferação Nociva de Algas/fisiologia , Diatomáceas/fisiologia , Mudança Climática
8.
Ecol Evol ; 14(2): e10995, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38380068

RESUMO

Climate change is resulting in increasing ocean temperatures and salinity variability, particularly in estuarine environments. Tolerance of temperature and salinity change interact and thus may impact organismal resilience. Populations can respond to multiple stressors in the short-term (i.e., plasticity) or over longer timescales (i.e., adaptation). However, little is known about the short- or long-term effects of elevated temperature on the tolerance of acute temperature and salinity changes. Here, we characterized the response of the near-shore and estuarine copepod, Acartia tonsa, to temperature and salinity stress. Copepods originated from one of two sets of replicated >40 generation-old temperature-adapted lines: ambient (AM, 18°C) and ocean warming (OW, 22°C). Copepods from these lines were subjected to one and three generations at the reciprocal temperature. Copepods from all treatments were then assessed for differences in acute temperature and salinity tolerance. Development (one generation), three generations, and >40 generations of warming increased thermal tolerance compared to Ambient conditions, with development in OW resulting in equal thermal tolerance to three and >40 generations of OW. Strikingly, developmental OW and >40 generations of OW had no effect on low salinity tolerance relative to ambient. By contrast, when environmental salinity was reduced first, copepods had lower thermal tolerances. These results highlight the critical role for plasticity in the copepod climate response and suggest that salinity variability may reduce copepod tolerance to subsequent warming.

9.
Harmful Algae ; 126: 102439, 2023 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37290888

RESUMO

Although the typical framework for studies and models of bloom dynamics in toxigenic phytoplankton is predominantly based on abiotic determinants, there is mounting evidence of grazer control of toxin production. We tested for the effect of grazer control of toxin production and cell growth rate during a laboratory-simulated bloom of the dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella. We measured cellular toxin content and net growth rate when cells were exposed to copepod grazers (direct exposure), copepod cues (indirect exposure), and no copepods (control) throughout the exponential, stationary, and declining phases of the bloom. During the simulated bloom, cellular toxin content plateaued after the stationary phase and there was a significantly positive relationship between growth rate and toxin production, predominantly in the exponential phase. Grazer-induced toxin production was evident throughout the bloom, but highest during the exponential phase. Induction was greater when cells were directly exposed to grazers rather than their cues alone. In the presence of grazers toxin production and cell growth rate were negatively related, indicating a defense-growth trade-off. Further, a fitness reduction associated with toxin production was more evident in the presence than the absence of grazers. Consequently, the relationship between toxin production and cell growth is fundamentally different between constitutive and inducible defense. This suggests that understanding and predicting bloom dynamics requires considering both constitutive and grazer-induced toxin production.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Dinoflagellida , Animais , Fitoplâncton , Toxinas Marinhas
10.
PLoS One ; 18(4): e0282380, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37079566

RESUMO

Short-term, acute warming events are increasing in frequency across the world's oceans. For short-lived species like most copepods, these extreme events can occur over both within- and between-generational time scales. Yet, it is unclear whether exposure to acute warming during early life stages of copepods can cause lingering effects on metabolism through development, even after the event has ended. These lingering effects would reduce the amount of energy devoted to growth and affect copepod population dynamics. We exposed nauplii of an ecologically important coastal species, Acartia tonsa, to a 24-hour warming event (control: 18°C; treatment: 28°C), and then tracked individual respiration rate, body length, and stage duration through development. As expected, we observed a decrease in mass-specific respiration rates as individuals developed. However, exposure to acute warming had no effect on the ontogenetic patterns in per-capita or mass-specific respiration rates, body length, or development time. The lack of these carryover effects through ontogeny suggests within-generational resilience to acute warming in this copepod species.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Humanos , Animais , Oceanos e Mares , Dinâmica Populacional , Respiração , Tamanho Corporal
11.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 1147, 2022 03 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35241657

RESUMO

Adaptive evolution and phenotypic plasticity will fuel resilience in the geologically unprecedented warming and acidification of the earth's oceans, however, we have much to learn about the interactions and costs of these mechanisms of resilience. Here, using 20 generations of experimental evolution followed by three generations of reciprocal transplants, we investigated the relationship between adaptation and plasticity in the marine copepod, Acartia tonsa, in future global change conditions (high temperature and high CO2). We found parallel adaptation to global change conditions in genes related to stress response, gene expression regulation, actin regulation, developmental processes, and energy production. However, reciprocal transplantation showed that adaptation resulted in a loss of transcriptional plasticity, reduced fecundity, and reduced population growth when global change-adapted animals were returned to ambient conditions or reared in low food conditions. However, after three successive transplant generations, global change-adapted animals were able to match the ambient-adaptive transcriptional profile. Concurrent changes in allele frequencies and erosion of nucleotide diversity suggest that this recovery occurred via adaptation back to ancestral conditions. These results demonstrate that while plasticity facilitated initial survival in global change conditions, it eroded after 20 generations as populations adapted, limiting resilience to new stressors and previously benign environments.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Aclimatação/genética , Adaptação Fisiológica/genética , Animais , Copépodes/genética , Oceanos e Mares , Água do Mar
12.
Evol Appl ; 14(8): 2114-2123, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34429752

RESUMO

Whether populations can adapt to predicted climate change conditions, and how rapidly, are critical questions for the management of natural systems. Experimental evolution has become an important tool to answer these questions. In order to provide useful, realistic insights into the adaptive response of populations to climate change, there needs to be careful consideration of how genetic differentiation and phenotypic plasticity interact to generate observed phenotypic changes. We exposed three populations of the widespread copepod Acartia tonsa (Crustacea) to chronic, sublethal temperature selection for 15 generations. We generated thermal survivorship curves at regular intervals both during and after this period of selection to track the evolution of thermal tolerance. Using reciprocal transplants between ambient and warming conditions, we also tracked changes in the strength of phenotypic plasticity in thermal tolerance. We observed significant increases in thermal tolerance in the Warming lineages, while plasticity in thermal tolerance was strongly reduced. We suggest these changes are driven by a negative relationship between thermal tolerance and plasticity in thermal tolerance. Our results indicate that adaptation to warming through an increase in thermal tolerance might not reduce vulnerability to climate change if the increase comes at the expense of tolerance plasticity. These results illustrate the importance of considering changes in both a trait of interest and the trait plasticity during experimental evolution.

13.
Mar Environ Res ; 170: 105446, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34418733

RESUMO

Mercury (Hg) and methylmercury (CH3Hg) are found at trace levels in most marine waters. These species, particularly CH3Hg, then ominously bioaccumulate through marine food chains eventually reaching potentially harmful levels in top oceanic wildlife. Accordingly, it is important to measure and evaluate uptake at environmentally relevant concentrations where trophic transfer initiates; during uptake in primary producers, and consumption by plankton grazers. Experiments using cultured copepods (Acartia tonsa) and field zooplankton assemblages were performed with two different sized diatom species labeled with stable isotopes of inorganic Hg (200Hg) and CH3Hg (CH3199Hg) at different concentrations. We observed size-specific effects on algal uptake and transfer to copepods, in addition to effects of Hg species concentration. Prey size effects were likewise observed on copepod assimilation efficiencies (AE). Average AE of 200Hg for copepods feeding on smaller diatoms was 50%, and 39% for larger diatoms. The AEs were much greater for CH3199Hg, yielding 71% for the smaller and 88% for the larger diatoms. These experiments add evidence demonstrating a significant relationship between Hg and CH3Hg exposure concentration and subsequent algal uptake and transfer to zooplankton. Furthermore, results imply that facilitated uptake of CH3Hg into algae occurs at low (~pM) concentrations, which has been suggested but not confirmed in previous research.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Diatomáceas , Mercúrio , Compostos de Metilmercúrio , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Animais , Cadeia Alimentar , Mercúrio/análise , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Zooplâncton
14.
Ecol Evol ; 10(21): 12200-12210, 2020 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33209281

RESUMO

Organisms experience variation in the thermal environment on several different temporal scales, with seasonality being particularly prominent in temperate regions. For organisms with short generation times, seasonal variation is experienced across, rather than within, generations. How this affects the seasonal evolution of thermal tolerance and phenotypic plasticity is understudied, but has direct implications for the thermal ecology of these organisms. Here we document intra-annual patterns of thermal tolerance in two species of Acartia copepods (Crustacea) from a highly seasonal estuary, showing strong variation across the annual temperature cycle. Common garden, split-brood experiments indicate that this seasonal variation in thermal tolerance, along with seasonal variation in body size and phenotypic plasticity, is likely affected by genetic polymorphism. Our results show that adaptation to seasonal variation is important to consider when predicting how populations may respond to ongoing climate change.

15.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 62, 2020 01 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31919456

RESUMO

Linking pH/pCO2 natural variation to phenotypic traits and performance of foundational species provides essential information for assessing and predicting the impact of ocean acidification (OA) on marine ecosystems. Yet, evidence of such linkage for copepods, the most abundant metazoans in the oceans, remains scarce, particularly for naturally corrosive Eastern Boundary Upwelling systems (EBUs). This study assessed the relationship between pH levels and traits (body and egg size) and performance (ingestion rate (IR) and egg reproduction rate (EPR)) of the numerically dominant neritic copepod Acartia tonsa, in a year-round upwelling system of the northern (23° S) Humboldt EBUs. The study revealed decreases in chlorophyll (Chl) ingestion rate, egg production rate and egg size with decreasing pH as well as egg production efficiency, but the opposite for copepod body size. Further, ingestion rate increased hyperbolically with Chl, and saturated at ~1 µg Chl. L-1. Food resources categorized as high (H, >1 µg L-1) and low (L, <1 µg L-1) levels, and pH-values categorized as equivalent to present day (≤400 µatm pCO2, pH > 7.89) and future (>400 µatm pCO2, pH < 7.89) were used to compare our observations to values globally employed to experimentally test copepod sensitivity to OA. A comparison (PERMANOVA) test with Chl/pH (2*2) design showed that partially overlapping OA levels expected for the year 2100 in other ocean regions, low-pH conditions in this system negatively impacted traits and performance associated with copepod fitness. However, interacting antagonistically with pH, food resource (Chl) maintained copepod production in spite of low pH levels. Thus, the deleterious effects of ocean acidification are modulated by resource availability in this system.


Assuntos
Copépodes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Tamanho Corporal , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Clorofila/química , Clorofila/metabolismo , Copépodes/metabolismo , Ecossistema , Feminino , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Óvulo/fisiologia , Estações do Ano , Água do Mar/química , Temperatura
16.
Sci Total Environ ; 738: 139803, 2020 Oct 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32563789

RESUMO

Time-series measurements of methylmercury (MeHg) concentrations in short-lived planktic animals, such as copepods, could allow for an evaluation of mercury (Hg) inputs and transferability to organisms in marine environments. If reliable, MeHg measurements in formalin-preserved marine animals could offer insights into past environmental MeHg levels. In the present study, we examined whether the amount of MeHg changed over time in formalin-preserved copepods for two species, Acartia tonsa, and Temora longicornis. Over a 51 (A. tonsa) and 7 (T. longicornis) week incubation, we found significant changes in MeHg content in both copepods, while the timing of these changes differed between species. Furthermore, we investigated the mechanism behind these temporal changes through a separate incubation experiment of formalin spiked with two levels of organic matter (OM), and stable-isotope-enriched Hg tracers. We found that the methylation of an inorganic 199Hg tracer was significantly higher in OM-enriched solutions in comparison to a control seawater-formalin solution. Our results suggest that formalin-preserved copepods are not fit for studies of past trends due to ongoing and unpredictable abiotic transformations of Hg in chemically preserved animal tissue.


Assuntos
Mercúrio/análise , Compostos de Metilmercúrio , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Animais , Bioacumulação , Monitoramento Ambiental , Cadeia Alimentar , Formaldeído , Zooplâncton
17.
Harmful Algae ; 84: 181-187, 2019 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31128802

RESUMO

Dinoflagellate paralytic shellfish toxin (PST) production is mediated by several abiotic and biotic factors. This study compared the relative importance of nitrogen source and concentration, prey alarm cues and grazer presence on toxin production of the marine dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella (Group I, strain BF-5). In separate assays run under either nutrient-replete (F/2 medium) or nutrient-depleted (filtered seawater) conditions, PST production of A. catenella was measured as a function of varying concentrations of added nitrogen sources (ammonium and urea), alarm cues from lysed conspecific (A. catenella Group I strains) and interspecific (the diatom, Thalassiosira weissflogii, and the green flagellate, Tetraselmis sp.) algae, and the presence of a grazer (the copepod Acartia hudsonica). Results showed that addition of ammonium or urea did not increase PST production. Unexpectedly, interspecific alarm cues increased toxin production but conspecific ones did not. Grazer presence dramatically induced PST production in A. catenella, irrespective of nutrient conditions, and this effect was an order of magnitude greater than any of the other variables tested. These results corroborate previous studies on grazer-induced PST production, and support the hypothesis that grazer-induced toxin production is not an experimental artifact, but rather a prey defense mechanism.


Assuntos
Copépodes , Dinoflagellida , Toxinas Marinhas , Animais , Sinais (Psicologia) , Nitrogênio
18.
R Soc Open Sci ; 6(3): 182115, 2019 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31032052

RESUMO

Predicting the response of populations to climate change requires an understanding of how various factors affect thermal performance. Genetic differentiation is well known to affect thermal performance, but the effects of sex and developmental phenotypic plasticity often go uncharacterized. We used common garden experiments to test for effects of local adaptation, developmental phenotypic plasticity and individual sex on thermal performance of the ubiquitous copepod, Acartia tonsa (Calanoida, Crustacea) from two populations strongly differing in thermal regimes (Florida and Connecticut, USA). Females had higher thermal tolerance than males in both populations, while the Florida population had higher thermal tolerance compared with the Connecticut population. An effect of developmental phenotypic plasticity on thermal tolerance was observed only in the Connecticut population. Our results show clearly that thermal performance is affected by complex interactions of the three tested variables. Ignoring sex-specific differences in thermal performance may result in a severe underestimation of population-level impacts of warming because of population decline due to sperm limitation. Furthermore, despite having a higher thermal tolerance, low-latitude populations may be more vulnerable to warming as they lack the ability to respond to increases in temperature through phenotypic plasticity.

19.
Mar Environ Res ; 146: 80-88, 2019 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30926196

RESUMO

Long-term environmental records are among the most valuable assets for understanding the trajectory and consequences of climate change. Here we report on a newly recovered time-series from Project Oceanology, a non-profit ocean science organization serving New England schools (USA) since 1972. As part of its educational mission, Project Oceanology has routinely and consistently recorded water temperature, pH, and oxygen as well as invertebrate and fish abundance in nearshore waters of the Thames River estuary in eastern Long Island Sound (LIS). We digitized these long-term records to test for decadal trends in abiotic and biotic variables including shifts in species abundance, richness, and diversity. Consistent with previous studies, the data revealed an above-average warming rate of eastern LIS waters over the past four decades (+0.45 °C decade-1), a non-linear acidification trend twice the global average (-0.04 pH units decade-1), and a notable decline in whole water-column dissolved oxygen concentrations (-0.29 mg L-1 decade-1). Trawl catches between 1997 and 2016 suggested a significant decrease in overall species diversity and richness, declines in cold-water adapted species such as American lobster (Homarus americanus), rock crab (Cancer irroratus), and winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus), but concurrent increases in the warm-water decapod Libinia emarginata (spider crab). Our study confirmed that Long Island Sound is a rapidly changing urban estuary, while demonstrating the value of long-term observations made by citizen-scientists, educators, and other stakeholders.


Assuntos
Mudança Climática/estatística & dados numéricos , Monitorização de Parâmetros Ecológicos , Estuários , Animais , Biodiversidade , Braquiúros , Ciência do Cidadão , Peixes , Linguado , Nephropidae , New England , Temperatura
20.
PLoS One ; 10(6): e0130097, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26075900

RESUMO

The marine copepod Acartia hudsonica was shown to be adapted to dinoflagellate prey, Alexandrium fundyense, which produce paralytic shellfish toxins (PST). Adaptation to PSTs in other organisms is caused by a mutation in the sodium channel. Recently, a mutation in the sodium channel in A. hudsonica was found. In this study, we rigorously tested for advantages, costs, and trade-offs associated with the mutant isoform of A. hudsonica under toxic and non-toxic conditions. We combined fitness with wild-type: mutant isoform ratio measurements on the same individual copepod to test our hypotheses. All A. hudsonica copepods express both the wild-type and mutant sodium channel isoforms, but in different proportions; some individuals express predominantly mutant (PMI) or wild-type isoforms (PWI), while most individuals express relatively equal amounts of each (EI). There was no consistent pattern of improved performance as a function of toxin dose for egg production rate (EPR), ingestion rate (I), and gross growth efficiency (GGE) for individuals in the PMI group relative to individuals in the PWI expression group. Neither was there any evidence to indicate a fitness benefit to the mutant isoform at intermediate toxin doses. No clear advantage under toxic conditions was associated with the mutation. Using a mixed-diet approach, there was also no observed relationship between individual wild-type: mutant isoform ratios and among expression groups, on both toxic and non-toxic diets, for eggs produced over three days. Lastly, expression of the mutant isoform did not mitigate the negative effects of the toxin. That is, the reductions in EPR from a toxic to non-toxic diet for copepods were independent of expression groups. Overall, the results did not support our hypotheses; the mutant sodium channel isoform does not appear to be related to adaptation to PST in A. hudsonica. Other potential mechanisms responsible for the adaptation are discussed.


Assuntos
Copépodes/efeitos dos fármacos , Copépodes/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Ingestão de Alimentos/genética , Ovos/análise , Toxinas Marinhas/toxicidade , Mutação/genética , Frutos do Mar/toxicidade , Canais de Sódio/genética , Animais , Copépodes/genética
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