Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620

Reproduction in many organisms can be disrupted by changes to the physical environment, such as those predicted to occur during climate change. Marine organisms face the dual climate change threats of increasing temperature and ocean acidification, yet no studies have examined the potential interact...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miller, Garielle M, Kroon, F J, Metcalfe, Sarah, Munday, Philip L
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science 2015
Subjects:
pH
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.836664
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.836664
id ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.836664
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Amphiprion melanopus
Animalia
Chordata
Coast and continental shelf
Containers and aquaria 20-1000 L or < 1 m**2
Laboratory experiment
Nekton
Pelagos
Reproduction
FOS Medical biotechnology
Single species
South Pacific
Temperature
Tropical
Species
Figure
Treatment
Temperature, water
Month
Clutches per month
Reproductive pairs
Clutches per pair
Clutches per pair, standard error
Eggs per clutch
Eggs per clutch, standard error
Eggs area
Eggs area, standard error
Reproductive output per clutch
Reproductive output per clutch, standard error
Clutches, survived to hatching
Clutches, survived to hatching , standard error
Eggs survived to hatching
Eggs survived to hatching, standard error
Hatchling length
Hatchling length, standard error
Yolk area
Yolk area, standard error
Condition index
Condition index, standard error
Hepatosomatic index
Hepatosomatic index, standard error
Gonadosomatic index
Gonadosomatic index, standard error
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration, standard error
pH
pH, standard error
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air, standard error
Temperature, water, standard error
Alkalinity, total
Alkalinity, total, standard error
Salinity
Salinity, standard error
Bicarbonate ion
Bicarbonate ion, standard error
Carbonate system computation flag
Carbon dioxide
Fugacity of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Carbonate ion
Carbon, inorganic, dissolved
Aragonite saturation state
Calcite saturation state
Potentiometric
Calculated using CO2SYS
Potentiometric titration
Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. 2010
Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre OA-ICC
spellingShingle Amphiprion melanopus
Animalia
Chordata
Coast and continental shelf
Containers and aquaria 20-1000 L or < 1 m**2
Laboratory experiment
Nekton
Pelagos
Reproduction
FOS Medical biotechnology
Single species
South Pacific
Temperature
Tropical
Species
Figure
Treatment
Temperature, water
Month
Clutches per month
Reproductive pairs
Clutches per pair
Clutches per pair, standard error
Eggs per clutch
Eggs per clutch, standard error
Eggs area
Eggs area, standard error
Reproductive output per clutch
Reproductive output per clutch, standard error
Clutches, survived to hatching
Clutches, survived to hatching , standard error
Eggs survived to hatching
Eggs survived to hatching, standard error
Hatchling length
Hatchling length, standard error
Yolk area
Yolk area, standard error
Condition index
Condition index, standard error
Hepatosomatic index
Hepatosomatic index, standard error
Gonadosomatic index
Gonadosomatic index, standard error
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration, standard error
pH
pH, standard error
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air, standard error
Temperature, water, standard error
Alkalinity, total
Alkalinity, total, standard error
Salinity
Salinity, standard error
Bicarbonate ion
Bicarbonate ion, standard error
Carbonate system computation flag
Carbon dioxide
Fugacity of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Carbonate ion
Carbon, inorganic, dissolved
Aragonite saturation state
Calcite saturation state
Potentiometric
Calculated using CO2SYS
Potentiometric titration
Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. 2010
Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre OA-ICC
Miller, Garielle M
Kroon, F J
Metcalfe, Sarah
Munday, Philip L
Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
topic_facet Amphiprion melanopus
Animalia
Chordata
Coast and continental shelf
Containers and aquaria 20-1000 L or < 1 m**2
Laboratory experiment
Nekton
Pelagos
Reproduction
FOS Medical biotechnology
Single species
South Pacific
Temperature
Tropical
Species
Figure
Treatment
Temperature, water
Month
Clutches per month
Reproductive pairs
Clutches per pair
Clutches per pair, standard error
Eggs per clutch
Eggs per clutch, standard error
Eggs area
Eggs area, standard error
Reproductive output per clutch
Reproductive output per clutch, standard error
Clutches, survived to hatching
Clutches, survived to hatching , standard error
Eggs survived to hatching
Eggs survived to hatching, standard error
Hatchling length
Hatchling length, standard error
Yolk area
Yolk area, standard error
Condition index
Condition index, standard error
Hepatosomatic index
Hepatosomatic index, standard error
Gonadosomatic index
Gonadosomatic index, standard error
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration
Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration, standard error
pH
pH, standard error
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air, standard error
Temperature, water, standard error
Alkalinity, total
Alkalinity, total, standard error
Salinity
Salinity, standard error
Bicarbonate ion
Bicarbonate ion, standard error
Carbonate system computation flag
Carbon dioxide
Fugacity of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air
Carbonate ion
Carbon, inorganic, dissolved
Aragonite saturation state
Calcite saturation state
Potentiometric
Calculated using CO2SYS
Potentiometric titration
Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. 2010
Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre OA-ICC
description Reproduction in many organisms can be disrupted by changes to the physical environment, such as those predicted to occur during climate change. Marine organisms face the dual climate change threats of increasing temperature and ocean acidification, yet no studies have examined the potential interactive effects of these stressors on reproduction in marine fishes. We used a long-term experiment to test the interactive effects of increased temperature and CO2 on the reproductive performance of the anemonefish, Amphiprion melanopus. Adult breeding pairs were kept for 10 months at three temperatures, 28.5°C (+0.0°C), 30.0°C (+1.5°C) and 31.5°C (+3.0°C), cross-factored with 3 CO2 levels, a current day control (417 µatm) and moderate (644 µatm) and high (1134 µatm) treatments consistent with the range of CO2 projections for the year 2100 under RCP8.5. We recorded each egg clutch produced during the breeding season, the number of eggs laid per clutch, average egg size, fertilization success, survival to hatching, hatchling length and yolk provisioning. Adult body condition, hepatosomatic index, gonadosomatic index, and plasma 17beta-estradiol concentrations were measured at the end of the breeding season to determine the effect of prolonged exposure to increased temperature and elevated CO2 on adults, and to examine potential physiological mechanisms for changes in reproduction. Temperature had by far the stronger influence on reproduction, with clear declines in reproduction occurring in the +1.5°C treatment and ceasing altogether in the +3.0°C treatment. In contrast, CO2 had a minimal effect on the majority of reproductive traits measured, but caused a decline in offspring quality in combination with elevated temperature. We detected no significant effect of temperature or CO2 on adult body condition or hepatosomatic index. Elevated temperature had a significant negative effect on plasma 17beta-estradiol concentrations, suggesting that declines in reproduction with increasing temperature were due to the thermal sensitivity of reproductive hormones rather than a reduction in energy available for reproduction. Our results show that elevated temperature exerts a stronger influence than high CO2 on reproduction in A. melanopus. Understanding how these two environmental variables interact to affect the reproductive performance of marine organisms will be important for predicting the future impacts of climate change. : In order to allow full comparability with other ocean acidification data sets, the R package seacarb (Lavigne et al, 2014) was used to compute a complete and consistent set of carbonate system variables, as described by Nisumaa et al. (2010). In this dataset the original values were archived in addition with the recalculated parameters (see related PI). The date of carbonate chemistry calculation is 2014-09-30.
format Dataset
author Miller, Garielle M
Kroon, F J
Metcalfe, Sarah
Munday, Philip L
author_facet Miller, Garielle M
Kroon, F J
Metcalfe, Sarah
Munday, Philip L
author_sort Miller, Garielle M
title Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
title_short Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
title_full Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
title_fullStr Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
title_full_unstemmed Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620
title_sort temperature is the evil twin: effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: miller, garielle m; kroon, f j; metcalfe, sarah; munday, philip l (2014): temperature is the evil twin: effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. ecological applications, 25, 603-620
publisher PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.836664
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.836664
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.942,-66.942,-67.976,-67.976)
geographic Metcalfe
Pacific
geographic_facet Metcalfe
Pacific
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb
https://dx.doi.org/10.1890/14-0559.1
https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
cc-by-3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.836664
https://doi.org/10.1890/14-0559.1
_version_ 1766157457891000320
spelling ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.836664 2023-05-15T17:50:37+02:00 Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish, supplement to: Miller, Garielle M; Kroon, F J; Metcalfe, Sarah; Munday, Philip L (2014): Temperature is the evil twin: Effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications, 25, 603-620 Miller, Garielle M Kroon, F J Metcalfe, Sarah Munday, Philip L 2015 text/tab-separated-values https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.836664 https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.836664 en eng PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb https://dx.doi.org/10.1890/14-0559.1 https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode cc-by-3.0 CC-BY Amphiprion melanopus Animalia Chordata Coast and continental shelf Containers and aquaria 20-1000 L or < 1 m**2 Laboratory experiment Nekton Pelagos Reproduction FOS Medical biotechnology Single species South Pacific Temperature Tropical Species Figure Treatment Temperature, water Month Clutches per month Reproductive pairs Clutches per pair Clutches per pair, standard error Eggs per clutch Eggs per clutch, standard error Eggs area Eggs area, standard error Reproductive output per clutch Reproductive output per clutch, standard error Clutches, survived to hatching Clutches, survived to hatching , standard error Eggs survived to hatching Eggs survived to hatching, standard error Hatchling length Hatchling length, standard error Yolk area Yolk area, standard error Condition index Condition index, standard error Hepatosomatic index Hepatosomatic index, standard error Gonadosomatic index Gonadosomatic index, standard error Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration Plasma 17beta-estradiol concentration, standard error pH pH, standard error Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air Partial pressure of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air, standard error Temperature, water, standard error Alkalinity, total Alkalinity, total, standard error Salinity Salinity, standard error Bicarbonate ion Bicarbonate ion, standard error Carbonate system computation flag Carbon dioxide Fugacity of carbon dioxide water at sea surface temperature wet air Carbonate ion Carbon, inorganic, dissolved Aragonite saturation state Calcite saturation state Potentiometric Calculated using CO2SYS Potentiometric titration Calculated using seacarb after Nisumaa et al. 2010 Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre OA-ICC Supplementary Dataset dataset Dataset 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.836664 https://doi.org/10.1890/14-0559.1 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Reproduction in many organisms can be disrupted by changes to the physical environment, such as those predicted to occur during climate change. Marine organisms face the dual climate change threats of increasing temperature and ocean acidification, yet no studies have examined the potential interactive effects of these stressors on reproduction in marine fishes. We used a long-term experiment to test the interactive effects of increased temperature and CO2 on the reproductive performance of the anemonefish, Amphiprion melanopus. Adult breeding pairs were kept for 10 months at three temperatures, 28.5°C (+0.0°C), 30.0°C (+1.5°C) and 31.5°C (+3.0°C), cross-factored with 3 CO2 levels, a current day control (417 µatm) and moderate (644 µatm) and high (1134 µatm) treatments consistent with the range of CO2 projections for the year 2100 under RCP8.5. We recorded each egg clutch produced during the breeding season, the number of eggs laid per clutch, average egg size, fertilization success, survival to hatching, hatchling length and yolk provisioning. Adult body condition, hepatosomatic index, gonadosomatic index, and plasma 17beta-estradiol concentrations were measured at the end of the breeding season to determine the effect of prolonged exposure to increased temperature and elevated CO2 on adults, and to examine potential physiological mechanisms for changes in reproduction. Temperature had by far the stronger influence on reproduction, with clear declines in reproduction occurring in the +1.5°C treatment and ceasing altogether in the +3.0°C treatment. In contrast, CO2 had a minimal effect on the majority of reproductive traits measured, but caused a decline in offspring quality in combination with elevated temperature. We detected no significant effect of temperature or CO2 on adult body condition or hepatosomatic index. Elevated temperature had a significant negative effect on plasma 17beta-estradiol concentrations, suggesting that declines in reproduction with increasing temperature were due to the thermal sensitivity of reproductive hormones rather than a reduction in energy available for reproduction. Our results show that elevated temperature exerts a stronger influence than high CO2 on reproduction in A. melanopus. Understanding how these two environmental variables interact to affect the reproductive performance of marine organisms will be important for predicting the future impacts of climate change. : In order to allow full comparability with other ocean acidification data sets, the R package seacarb (Lavigne et al, 2014) was used to compute a complete and consistent set of carbonate system variables, as described by Nisumaa et al. (2010). In this dataset the original values were archived in addition with the recalculated parameters (see related PI). The date of carbonate chemistry calculation is 2014-09-30. Dataset Ocean acidification DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Metcalfe ENVELOPE(-66.942,-66.942,-67.976,-67.976) Pacific