CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.

Open ocean surface CO2 levels are projected to reach approximately 800 µatm, and ocean pH to decrease by approximately 0.3 units by the year 2100 due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions and the subsequent process of ocean acidification (OA). When exposed to these CO2/pH values, several fish species displ...

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Main Authors: Kwan, Garfield Tsz, Hamilton, Trevor James, Tresguerres, Martin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5q4308sx
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt5q4308sx 2023-05-15T17:50:37+02:00 CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish. Kwan, Garfield Tsz Hamilton, Trevor James Tresguerres, Martin 170283 2017-07-05 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5q4308sx unknown eScholarship, University of California qt5q4308sx https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5q4308sx public Royal Society open science, vol 4, iss 7 GABA anxiety blacksmith climate change shoaling upwelling article 2017 ftcdlib 2021-01-24T17:38:23Z Open ocean surface CO2 levels are projected to reach approximately 800 µatm, and ocean pH to decrease by approximately 0.3 units by the year 2100 due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions and the subsequent process of ocean acidification (OA). When exposed to these CO2/pH values, several fish species display abnormal behaviour in laboratory tests, an effect proposed to be linked to altered neuronal GABAA- receptor function. Juvenile blacksmith (Chromis punctipinnis) are social fish that regularly experience CO2/pH fluctuations through kelp forest diurnal primary production and upwelling events, so we hypothesized that they might be resilient to OA. Blacksmiths were exposed to control conditions (pH ∼ 7.92; pCO2 ∼ 540 µatm), constant acidification (pH ∼ 7.71; pCO2 ∼ 921 µatm) and oscillating acidification (pH ∼ 7.91, pCO2 ∼ 560 µatm (day), pH ∼ 7.70, pCO2 ∼ 955 µatm (night)), and caught and tested in two seasons of the year when the ocean temperature was different: winter (16.5 ± 0.1°C) and summer (23.1 ± 0.1°C). Neither constant nor oscillating CO2-induced acidification affected blacksmith individual light/dark preference, inter-individual distance in a shoal or the shoal's response to a novel object, suggesting that blacksmiths are tolerant to projected future OA conditions. However, blacksmiths tested during the winter demonstrated significantly higher dark preference in the individual light/dark preference test, thus confirming season and/or water temperature as relevant factors to consider in behavioural tests. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic GABA
anxiety
blacksmith
climate change
shoaling
upwelling
spellingShingle GABA
anxiety
blacksmith
climate change
shoaling
upwelling
Kwan, Garfield Tsz
Hamilton, Trevor James
Tresguerres, Martin
CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
topic_facet GABA
anxiety
blacksmith
climate change
shoaling
upwelling
description Open ocean surface CO2 levels are projected to reach approximately 800 µatm, and ocean pH to decrease by approximately 0.3 units by the year 2100 due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions and the subsequent process of ocean acidification (OA). When exposed to these CO2/pH values, several fish species display abnormal behaviour in laboratory tests, an effect proposed to be linked to altered neuronal GABAA- receptor function. Juvenile blacksmith (Chromis punctipinnis) are social fish that regularly experience CO2/pH fluctuations through kelp forest diurnal primary production and upwelling events, so we hypothesized that they might be resilient to OA. Blacksmiths were exposed to control conditions (pH ∼ 7.92; pCO2 ∼ 540 µatm), constant acidification (pH ∼ 7.71; pCO2 ∼ 921 µatm) and oscillating acidification (pH ∼ 7.91, pCO2 ∼ 560 µatm (day), pH ∼ 7.70, pCO2 ∼ 955 µatm (night)), and caught and tested in two seasons of the year when the ocean temperature was different: winter (16.5 ± 0.1°C) and summer (23.1 ± 0.1°C). Neither constant nor oscillating CO2-induced acidification affected blacksmith individual light/dark preference, inter-individual distance in a shoal or the shoal's response to a novel object, suggesting that blacksmiths are tolerant to projected future OA conditions. However, blacksmiths tested during the winter demonstrated significantly higher dark preference in the individual light/dark preference test, thus confirming season and/or water temperature as relevant factors to consider in behavioural tests.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kwan, Garfield Tsz
Hamilton, Trevor James
Tresguerres, Martin
author_facet Kwan, Garfield Tsz
Hamilton, Trevor James
Tresguerres, Martin
author_sort Kwan, Garfield Tsz
title CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
title_short CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
title_full CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
title_fullStr CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
title_full_unstemmed CO2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
title_sort co2-induced ocean acidification does not affect individual or group behaviour in a temperate damselfish.
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2017
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5q4308sx
op_coverage 170283
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Royal Society open science, vol 4, iss 7
op_relation qt5q4308sx
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5q4308sx
op_rights public
_version_ 1766157462104178688