Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi

Many crustaceans are prodigious scavengers and predators whose feeding behavior may be sensitive to environmental change, such as ocean acidification (OA) and ocean warming (OW). In this study, I tested the hypothesis that the feeding behavior of the rock crab, Cancer anthonyi, is affected by OA and...

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Main Author: Childers, Elizabeth
Other Authors: Taylor, Jennifer
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63n3m4sh
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt63n3m4sh 2023-11-12T04:23:41+01:00 Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi Childers, Elizabeth Taylor, Jennifer 2023-01-01 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63n3m4sh en eng eScholarship, University of California qt63n3m4sh https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63n3m4sh public Biological oceanography behavior climate change crustacean feeding behavior ocean acidification ocean warming etd 2023 ftcdlib 2023-10-16T18:04:36Z Many crustaceans are prodigious scavengers and predators whose feeding behavior may be sensitive to environmental change, such as ocean acidification (OA) and ocean warming (OW). In this study, I tested the hypothesis that the feeding behavior of the rock crab, Cancer anthonyi, is affected by OA and OW conditions. Adult crabs were exposed to the following treatments (N=12 per treatment) for 8 weeks: ambient pH/ambient temperature (8.1 pH, 12℃), reduced pH/ambient temperature (7.7 pH/12℃), ambient pH/increased temperature (8.1 pH/16℃), or reduced pH/increased temperature (7.7 pH/16℃). Crabs were given two similarly sized mollusk prey items (mussel, Mytilus californianus and snail, Littorina spp.) twice per week and their feeding activity was video recorded for 5 minutes. A total of 14 feeding trials were performed in which multiple aspects of feeding behavior were recorded and compared across treatments: decision making time, prey handling time, prey preference, appetite (total number of prey consumed), prey consumption strategy, and shell damage to prey. Our results revealed sex-specific responses, whereby females had a lower appetite in the reduced pH/increased temperature treatment while males had a lower appetite in the reduced pH/ambient temperature treatment. All other feeding behaviors were unaffected by treatment. Two months of constant exposure to near-term OA and OW conditions are sufficient to alter some aspects of feeding behavior in adult C. anthonyi, despite natural exposure to environmental variations in upwelling regions of Southern California. The distinct responses observed in male and female crabs suggest that sex-based physiological differences should be considered in crustacean ocean acidification research. Thesis Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Biological oceanography
behavior
climate change
crustacean
feeding behavior
ocean acidification
ocean warming
spellingShingle Biological oceanography
behavior
climate change
crustacean
feeding behavior
ocean acidification
ocean warming
Childers, Elizabeth
Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
topic_facet Biological oceanography
behavior
climate change
crustacean
feeding behavior
ocean acidification
ocean warming
description Many crustaceans are prodigious scavengers and predators whose feeding behavior may be sensitive to environmental change, such as ocean acidification (OA) and ocean warming (OW). In this study, I tested the hypothesis that the feeding behavior of the rock crab, Cancer anthonyi, is affected by OA and OW conditions. Adult crabs were exposed to the following treatments (N=12 per treatment) for 8 weeks: ambient pH/ambient temperature (8.1 pH, 12℃), reduced pH/ambient temperature (7.7 pH/12℃), ambient pH/increased temperature (8.1 pH/16℃), or reduced pH/increased temperature (7.7 pH/16℃). Crabs were given two similarly sized mollusk prey items (mussel, Mytilus californianus and snail, Littorina spp.) twice per week and their feeding activity was video recorded for 5 minutes. A total of 14 feeding trials were performed in which multiple aspects of feeding behavior were recorded and compared across treatments: decision making time, prey handling time, prey preference, appetite (total number of prey consumed), prey consumption strategy, and shell damage to prey. Our results revealed sex-specific responses, whereby females had a lower appetite in the reduced pH/increased temperature treatment while males had a lower appetite in the reduced pH/ambient temperature treatment. All other feeding behaviors were unaffected by treatment. Two months of constant exposure to near-term OA and OW conditions are sufficient to alter some aspects of feeding behavior in adult C. anthonyi, despite natural exposure to environmental variations in upwelling regions of Southern California. The distinct responses observed in male and female crabs suggest that sex-based physiological differences should be considered in crustacean ocean acidification research.
author2 Taylor, Jennifer
format Thesis
author Childers, Elizabeth
author_facet Childers, Elizabeth
author_sort Childers, Elizabeth
title Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
title_short Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
title_full Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
title_fullStr Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab Cancer anthonyi
title_sort assessment of ocean acidification and warming on the feeding behavior of the yellow rock crab cancer anthonyi
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2023
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63n3m4sh
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation qt63n3m4sh
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/63n3m4sh
op_rights public
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