4.3 Article

Variable salinity tolerance in ascidian larvae is primarily a plastic response to the parental environment

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 561-572

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-013-9687-2

Keywords

Phenotypic plasticity; Transgenerational acclimation; Environmental variation; Tolerance range; Marine invertebrate; Ciona intestinalis

Funding

  1. EU
  2. Swedish Research Council VR
  3. Swedish Research Council Formas

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Both phenotypic plasticity and local genetic adaptation may contribute to a species' ability to inhabit different environmental conditions. While phenotypic plasticity is usually considered costly, local adaptation takes generations to respond to environmental change and may be constrained by strong gene flow. The majority of marine species have complex life-cycles with pelagic stages that might be expected to promote gene flow and plastic responses, and yet several notable examples of local adaptation have been found in species with broadcast larvae. In the ascidian, Ciona intestinalis (Linnaeus, 1767),-a common marine species with broadcast spawning and a short larval stage-previous studies have found marked differences in salinity tolerance of early life-history stages among populations from different salinity regimes. We used common-garden experiments to test whether observed differences in salinity tolerance could be explained by phenotypic plasticity. Adult ascidians from two low salinity populations [2-5 m depth, similar to 25 practical salinity units (PSU)], and two full salinity populations (25-27 m depth, similar to 31 PSU) were acclimated for 2-4 weeks at both 25 and 31 PSU. Gametes were fertilized at the acclimation salinities, and the newly formed embryos were transferred to 10 different salinities (21-39 PSU) and cultured to metamorphosis. Adult acclimation salinity had an overriding and significant effect on larval metamorphic success: tolerance norms for larvae almost fully matched the acclimation salinity of the parents, independent of parental origin (deep or shallow). However we also detected minor population differences that could be attributed to either local adaptation or persistent environmental effects. We conclude that differences in salinity tolerance of C. intestinalis larvae from different populations are driven primarily by transgenerational phenotypic plasticity, a strategy that seems particularly favourable for an organism living in coastal waters where salinity is less readily predicted than in the open oceans.

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