4.7 Article

The entangled multi-level responses of Mytilus galloprovincialis (Lamarck, 1819) to environmental stressors as detected by an integrated approach

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2021.105292

Keywords

Multiple-stressor; Functional traits; Antioxidant enzymes; Temperature; Hypoxia; Food; Mytilus galloprovincialis

Funding

  1. HARMONY Project, INTERREG Italia-Malta 2016 grant [C1-3.1-31]

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Anthropogenic pressure interacts with climate change effects and other stressors on marine biota, causing negative impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Impairment of individual functional traits can lead to ecological consequences, and a multiscale approach is necessary to monitor the effects of anthropogenic disturbance on ecosystem functioning.
Anthropogenic pressure adds up and interacts with the effects of climate change with a varying magnitude and potential changes depend on species' Life History (LH) traits, local environmental conditions and co-occurrence of several stressors. Stressors exert negative effects on marine biota when acting as a single factor, but the effects may be amplified when more than one stressor work in combination, producing interacting effects on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. The impairment of individual functional traits (FT) leads to strong rebounds on LH traits and this may have ecological consequences. No studies actually relate FT and antioxidant enzymes to multiple environmental stressors. In this paper we investigate the effects of food concentration, temperature and hypoxia on metabolic traits as expressed by a proxy such as respiration rate and feeding behaviour and on antioxidant enzymes (Catalase, Superoxide dismutase, Glutathione S-Transferase, Glutathione peroxidase) for the bivalve Mytilus galloprovincialis. Mussels were exposed to three temperatures (12, 20 and 28 degrees C) under normoxic (8 mg O-2 l(-1)) and hypoxic (similar to 2 mg O-2 l(-1)) conditions, with varying food concentrations ranging from 0.9 to 3.5 mu g of chlorophyll l(-1). The results show that FTs and antioxidant enzymes were affected by temperature, hypoxia and food availability, and outcome allowed us to emphasise that a multi-scalar integrated approach is suitable to detect and monitor effects of anthropogenic disturbance on ecosystem functioning.

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