Thanks mum. Maternal effects in response to ocean acidification of sea urchin larvae at different ecologically relevant temperatures

Juvenile stages of marine species might be more vulnerable than adults to climate change, however larval vulnerability to predictable environmental changes can be mitigated by parental anticipatory buffer effects occurring during gametogenesis. In this study, ocean acidification effect were investig...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Pollution Bulletin
Main Authors: Palombo C, Chiarore A, Ciscato M, Asnicar D, Mirasole A, Fabbrizzi E, Teixidó N, Munari M
Other Authors: Palombo, C, Chiarore, A, Ciscato, M, Asnicar, D, Mirasole, A, Fabbrizzi, E, Teixidó, N, Munari, M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3477349
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2023.114700
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Summary:Juvenile stages of marine species might be more vulnerable than adults to climate change, however larval vulnerability to predictable environmental changes can be mitigated by parental anticipatory buffer effects occurring during gametogenesis. In this study, ocean acidification effect were investigated on larval growth of two sea urchins, Arbacia lixula and Paracentrotus lividus, at different temperature levels. Results showed that altered pH and temperature affected larval development in both species, with significant length reductions of spicules and significant increases in abnormal larvae. Detrimental effects of reduced pH and high temperature were however dependent on the mother. Furthermore, the responses of A. lixula larvae from the ambient site (pH ∼ 8.0) were compared with those of larvae obtained from mothers collected from a natural CO2 vent (pH ∼ 7.7) in Ischia. Comparisons highlighted a transgenerational response, as the CO2 vent larvae proved to be more resilient to reduced pH, although more sensitive to increased temperature.