4.8 Article

Effects of ocean warming and acidification on survival, growth and skeletal development in the early benthic juvenile sea urchin (Heliocidaris erythrogramma)

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 2698-2707

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12249

Keywords

climate change; intertidal; juveniles; ocean acidification; ocean warming; sea urchin

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council

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Co-occurring ocean warming, acidification and reduced carbonate mineral saturation have significant impacts on marine biota, especially calcifying organisms. The effects of these stressors on development and calcification in newly metamorphosed juveniles (ca. 0.5 mm test diameter) of the intertidal sea urchin Heliocidaris erythrogramma, an ecologically important species in temperate Australia, were investigated in context with present and projected future conditions. Habitat temperature and pH/pCO(2) were documented to place experiments in a biologically and ecologically relevant context. These parameters fluctuated diurnally up to 10 degrees C and 0.45 pH units. The juveniles were exposed to three temperature (21, 23 and 25 degrees C) and four pH (8.1, 7.8, 7.6 and 7.4) treatments in all combinations, representing ambient sea surface conditions (21 degrees C, pH 8.1; pCO(2) 397; Omega(Ca) 4.7; Omega(Ar) 3.1), near-future projected change (+2-4 degrees C, -0.3-0.5 pH units; pCO(2) 400-1820; Omega(Ca) 5.0-1.6; Omega(Ar) 3.3-1.1), and extreme conditions experienced at low tide (+4 degrees C, -0.3-0.7 pH units; pCO(2) 2850-2967; Omega(Ca) 1.1-1.0; Omega(Ar) 0.7-0.6). The lowest pH treatment (pH 7.4) was used to assess tolerance levels. Juvenile survival and test growth were resilient to current and near-future warming and acidification. Spine development, however, was negatively affected by near-future increased temperature (+2-4 degrees C) and extreme acidification (pH 7.4), with a complex interaction between stressors. Near-future warming was the more significant stressor. Spine tips were dissolved in the pH 7.4 treatments. Adaptation to fluctuating temperature-pH conditions in the intertidal may convey resilience to juvenile H. erythrogramma to changing ocean conditions, however, ocean warming and acidification may shift baseline intertidal temperature and pH/pCO2 to levels that exceed tolerance limits.

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