RESEARCH ARTICLE

circumpolar distribution and is an abundant species in benthic communities of the Antarctic. Reproduction occurs during austral spring, when ozone concentrations over the past 25 years have been reduced by 50 % or more, potentially exposing the planktonic embryos and larvae to elevated levels of UVB...

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Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.613.5040
http://www.geneseo.edu/~bosch/Coverpage/marine_biology.pdf
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Summary:circumpolar distribution and is an abundant species in benthic communities of the Antarctic. Reproduction occurs during austral spring, when ozone concentrations over the past 25 years have been reduced by 50 % or more, potentially exposing the planktonic embryos and larvae to elevated levels of UVB. During spring of 1996, cultures of S. neumayeri embryos incubated under ambient and partitioned sunlight (minus UVB) at static depths between 0 and 7 m were analyzed for DNA damage [cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs)] and morphological abnormalities. At 0-m and 1-m depths, nearly 100 % of embryos developed abnormally, even under UVB-shielded conditions where little or no DNA damage accumulated. At depths>3 m, reduced or no abnormality was evident and DNA damage was negli-gible. Although UVB contributed to 0–65 % of solar-induced abnormalities, the mean contribution was 11±17 % and UVB was not primarily responsible for observed defects in urchin development. Moreover, developmental responses were not linearly related to ambient UVB gradients as might be expected, but are better characterized relative to threshold levels of total UVB exposure. Accumulated exposures of £ 25 kJ m)2 ambient UVB caused minimal DNA damage and al-lowed normal embryological development to proceed. Higher UVB exposures (especially ‡80 kJ m)2) pre-cluded normal development. An ancillary threshold limit of 17 CPDs mb)1 has been identified as the level of DNA damage that proscribes abnormal development. While higher wavelengths of UVA and visible light are not affected by ozone concentration and do not initiate significant CPD DNA damage, they did interfere sig-nificantly with the embryological development of S. neumayeri. It is concluded that exposure to increased UVB during recent Antarctic ozone-depletion cycles probably has only a small degree of impact relative to the magnitude of other solar effects on the develop-mental success of Sterechinus embryos, or compared to spawning seasons before ozone depletion (i.e., years prior to 1978).