Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance

Global change has resulted in oceans that are warmer, more acidic, and lower in oxygen. Individually any one of these stressors can have numerous negative impacts on marine organisms, and in combination they are likely to be particularly detrimental. Understanding the interactions between these fact...

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Main Authors: Noelle Lucey, Eileen Haskett, Rachel Collin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.588764/full
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spelling doaj-b6c5edbc206043caad003e06eb60650d2020-12-09T17:51:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452020-12-01710.3389/fmars.2020.588764588764Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair PerformanceNoelle LuceyEileen HaskettRachel CollinGlobal change has resulted in oceans that are warmer, more acidic, and lower in oxygen. Individually any one of these stressors can have numerous negative impacts on marine organisms, and in combination they are likely to be particularly detrimental. Understanding the interactions between these factors is important as they often covary, with warming promoting hypoxia, and hypoxia co-occurring with acidification. Few studies have examined how all three factors interact to affect organismal performance, and information is particularly sparse for tropical organisms. Here we documented a strong relationship between high temperatures, low dissolved oxygen (DO), and low pH in and around a tropical bay. We used these field values to inform two multi-stressor experiments. Each experimental factor had two levels, one representing current average conditions and the other representing current extreme conditions experienced in the area. We used sea urchin righting response as a measure of organismal performance for an important reef herbivore. In the first experiment 2-h exposures to a fully factorial combination of temperature, DO, and pH showed that righting success was significantly depressed under low oxygen. To more fully understand the impacts of pH, we acclimated sea urchins to control and low pH for 7 days and subsequently exposed them to the same experimental conditions. Sea urchins acclimated to control pH had significantly reduced righting success compared to animals acclimated to low pH, and righting success was significantly depressed under hypoxia and high temperature, compared to normoxia and ambient temperature. These results show that short, 2 h exposures to the temperature and DO extremes that are already experienced periodically by these animals have measurable detrimental effects on their performance. The positive impact of reduced pH is evident only over longer, 7 days durations, which are not currently experienced in this area.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.588764/fullhypoxiaglobal warmingocean acidificationEchinometramultiple stressor analysiscoral reef
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noelle Lucey
Eileen Haskett
Rachel Collin
spellingShingle Noelle Lucey
Eileen Haskett
Rachel Collin
Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
Frontiers in Marine Science
hypoxia
global warming
ocean acidification
Echinometra
multiple stressor analysis
coral reef
author_facet Noelle Lucey
Eileen Haskett
Rachel Collin
author_sort Noelle Lucey
title Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
title_short Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
title_full Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
title_fullStr Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
title_full_unstemmed Multi-stressor Extremes Found on a Tropical Coral Reef Impair Performance
title_sort multi-stressor extremes found on a tropical coral reef impair performance
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Global change has resulted in oceans that are warmer, more acidic, and lower in oxygen. Individually any one of these stressors can have numerous negative impacts on marine organisms, and in combination they are likely to be particularly detrimental. Understanding the interactions between these factors is important as they often covary, with warming promoting hypoxia, and hypoxia co-occurring with acidification. Few studies have examined how all three factors interact to affect organismal performance, and information is particularly sparse for tropical organisms. Here we documented a strong relationship between high temperatures, low dissolved oxygen (DO), and low pH in and around a tropical bay. We used these field values to inform two multi-stressor experiments. Each experimental factor had two levels, one representing current average conditions and the other representing current extreme conditions experienced in the area. We used sea urchin righting response as a measure of organismal performance for an important reef herbivore. In the first experiment 2-h exposures to a fully factorial combination of temperature, DO, and pH showed that righting success was significantly depressed under low oxygen. To more fully understand the impacts of pH, we acclimated sea urchins to control and low pH for 7 days and subsequently exposed them to the same experimental conditions. Sea urchins acclimated to control pH had significantly reduced righting success compared to animals acclimated to low pH, and righting success was significantly depressed under hypoxia and high temperature, compared to normoxia and ambient temperature. These results show that short, 2 h exposures to the temperature and DO extremes that are already experienced periodically by these animals have measurable detrimental effects on their performance. The positive impact of reduced pH is evident only over longer, 7 days durations, which are not currently experienced in this area.
topic hypoxia
global warming
ocean acidification
Echinometra
multiple stressor analysis
coral reef
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2020.588764/full
work_keys_str_mv AT noellelucey multistressorextremesfoundonatropicalcoralreefimpairperformance
AT eileenhaskett multistressorextremesfoundonatropicalcoralreefimpairperformance
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