4.7 Article

Temperature is the evil twin: effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 603-620

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/14-0559.1

Keywords

Amphiprion melanopus; carbon dioxide; cinnamon anemonefish; climate change; ocean acidification; ocean warming; reproduction

Funding

  1. ARC Centre of Excellence
  2. GBRMPA
  3. Sea World Research and Rescue Foundation
  4. Australian Coral Reef Society
  5. CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship Program

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Reproduction in many organisms can be disrupted by changes to the physical environment, such as those predicted to occur during climate change. Marine organisms face the dual climate change threats of increasing temperature and ocean acidification, yet no studies have examined the potential interactive effects of these stressors on reproduction in marine fishes. We used a long-term experiment to test the interactive effects of increased temperature and CO2 on the reproductive performance of the anemonefish, Amphiprion melanopus. Adult breeding pairs were kept for 10 months at three temperatures (28.5 degrees C [+0.0 degrees C], 30.0 degrees C [+1.5 degrees C] and 31.5 degrees C [+3.0 degrees C]) cross-factored with three CO2 levels (a current-day control [417 mu atm] and moderate [644 mu atm] and high [1134 mu atm]) treatments consistent with the range of CO2 projections for the year 2100. We recorded each egg clutch produced during the breeding season, the number of eggs laid per clutch, average egg size, fertilization success, survival to hatching, hatchling length, and yolk provisioning. Adult body condition, hepatosomatic index, gonadosomatic index, and plasma 17 beta-estradiol concentrations were measured at the end of the breeding season to determine the effect of prolonged exposure to increased temperature and elevated CO2 on adults, and to examine potential physiological mechanisms for changes in reproduction. Temperature had by far the stronger influence on reproduction, with clear declines in reproduction occurring in the +1.5 degrees C treatment and ceasing altogether in the +3.0 degrees C treatment. In contrast, CO2 had a minimal effect on the majority of reproductive traits measured, but caused a decline in offspring quality in combination with elevated temperature. We detected no significant effect of temperature or CO2 on adult body condition or hepatosomatic index. Elevated temperature had a significant negative effect on plasma 17 beta-estradiol concentrations, suggesting that declines in reproduction with increasing temperature were due to the thermal sensitivity of reproductive hormones rather than a reduction in energy available for reproduction. Our results show that elevated temperature exerts a stronger influence than high CO2 on reproduction in A. melanopus. Understanding how these two environmental variables interact to affect the reproductive performance of marine organisms will be important for predicting the future impacts of climate change.

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