Seawater carbonate chemistry and hatching, survival and development rate of Calanus pacificus

We characterized the vertical distribution of Calanus pacificus eggs and larvae and the carbonate chemistry that they are exposed to in Puget Sound, WA. We found that, under stratified conditions, more than 90% of eggs and nauplii stages 1–4 were distributed above the pycnocline, in seawater with pH...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McLaskey, Anna K, McElhany, Paul, Busch, Shallin D, Maher, Michael, Winans, Amanda K, Keister, Julie E
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2019
Subjects:
EXP
pH
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.910338
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.910338
Description
Summary:We characterized the vertical distribution of Calanus pacificus eggs and larvae and the carbonate chemistry that they are exposed to in Puget Sound, WA. We found that, under stratified conditions, more than 90% of eggs and nauplii stages 1–4 were distributed above the pycnocline, in seawater with pH higher than 7.7. In addition, eggs and larvae from 101 females were reared for 5 days under a range of pH conditions (7.2–8.0) to investigate how pH sensitivity varies among individuals. We observed a slight increase in naupliar survival at pH 7.3 in Individual Brood experiments, while in Mixed Brood experiments, exposure to pH 7.3 led to a small decline in hatching success. In a Split Brood experiment, inter-individual variability among different females' broods masked pH effects. These results indicate that C. pacificus early life stages are generally tolerant to short-term direct effects of ocean acidification.