Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature

Echinoderms are important members of diverse marine ecosystems worldwide, necessitating that many species possess the physiological plasticity to adapt to highly variable environments. Yet, echinoderms generally exhibit strong sensitivity to changes in seawater pCO2/pH associated with ocean acidific...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Astbury, Mia
Other Authors: Taylor, Jennifer R.A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2024
Subjects:
MCT
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tq54285
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt3tq54285 2024-10-06T13:51:53+00:00 Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature Astbury, Mia Taylor, Jennifer R.A 2024-01-01 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tq54285 en eng eScholarship, University of California qt3tq54285 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tq54285 public Biology Anti-predator behaviors Brittle star Echinoderms MCT etd 2024 ftcdlib 2024-09-20T00:21:57Z Echinoderms are important members of diverse marine ecosystems worldwide, necessitating that many species possess the physiological plasticity to adapt to highly variable environments. Yet, echinoderms generally exhibit strong sensitivity to changes in seawater pCO2/pH associated with ocean acidification (OA) and increases in seawater temperature associated with ocean warming (OW), often emerging in physiological changes that can alter their ecological interactions. The Western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, is one of the most abundant echinoderm species in the highly variable Southern California Bight, where they rely on limb autotomy and mobility to evade their many fish and invertebrate predators. The goal of this study was to determine the effects of climate change stressors on the anti-predator behaviors of O. spiculata, with the hypothesis that OA and OW would have measurable, contrasting effects on brittle star mobility. Brittle stars were exposed one of four treatments (N=12 each): control (pH 8.0/12°C), OA (pH 7.7/12°C), OW (pH 8.0/15°C), and OW+OA (pH 7.7/15°C). Following 29 days of exposure, kinematics of the righting, escape, and arm retraction responses were analyzed, along with arm flexibility. We found that brittle stars exposed to the combined OW+OA treatment had a shorter lag time for initiation of the escape response, but none of the other kinematics nor arm flexibility were affected by OA and OW. Under the combined OW+OA conditions used in this study, brittle stars appear to be more reactive, but otherwise the performance of their various anti-predator behaviors remain unaltered by experimental pH and temperature. Overall, O. spiculata exhibits little sensitivity to OA and OW conditions in regard to these specific ecologically important behaviors. Thesis Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Biology
Anti-predator behaviors
Brittle star
Echinoderms
MCT
spellingShingle Biology
Anti-predator behaviors
Brittle star
Echinoderms
MCT
Astbury, Mia
Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
topic_facet Biology
Anti-predator behaviors
Brittle star
Echinoderms
MCT
description Echinoderms are important members of diverse marine ecosystems worldwide, necessitating that many species possess the physiological plasticity to adapt to highly variable environments. Yet, echinoderms generally exhibit strong sensitivity to changes in seawater pCO2/pH associated with ocean acidification (OA) and increases in seawater temperature associated with ocean warming (OW), often emerging in physiological changes that can alter their ecological interactions. The Western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, is one of the most abundant echinoderm species in the highly variable Southern California Bight, where they rely on limb autotomy and mobility to evade their many fish and invertebrate predators. The goal of this study was to determine the effects of climate change stressors on the anti-predator behaviors of O. spiculata, with the hypothesis that OA and OW would have measurable, contrasting effects on brittle star mobility. Brittle stars were exposed one of four treatments (N=12 each): control (pH 8.0/12°C), OA (pH 7.7/12°C), OW (pH 8.0/15°C), and OW+OA (pH 7.7/15°C). Following 29 days of exposure, kinematics of the righting, escape, and arm retraction responses were analyzed, along with arm flexibility. We found that brittle stars exposed to the combined OW+OA treatment had a shorter lag time for initiation of the escape response, but none of the other kinematics nor arm flexibility were affected by OA and OW. Under the combined OW+OA conditions used in this study, brittle stars appear to be more reactive, but otherwise the performance of their various anti-predator behaviors remain unaltered by experimental pH and temperature. Overall, O. spiculata exhibits little sensitivity to OA and OW conditions in regard to these specific ecologically important behaviors.
author2 Taylor, Jennifer R.A
format Thesis
author Astbury, Mia
author_facet Astbury, Mia
author_sort Astbury, Mia
title Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
title_short Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
title_full Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
title_fullStr Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
title_full_unstemmed Anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, Ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced pH and increased temperature
title_sort anti-predator strategies of the western spiny brittle star, ophiothrix spiculata, exposed to reduced ph and increased temperature
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2024
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tq54285
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation qt3tq54285
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3tq54285
op_rights public
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