First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification

Understanding how seafood will be influenced by coming environmental changes such as ocean acidification is a research priority. One major gap in knowledge relates to the fact that many experiments are not considering relevant end points related directly to production (e.g., size, survival) and prod...

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Published in:Journal of Shellfish Research
Main Authors: Dupont, Sam, Hall, Emilie, Calosi, Piero, Lundve, Bengt
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:French
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/
https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/1/Sam_Dupont_et_al_decembre2014.pdf
https://doi.org/10.2983/035.033.0320
id ftunivquebecar:oai:semaphore.uqar.ca:2170
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spelling ftunivquebecar:oai:semaphore.uqar.ca:2170 2023-11-05T03:44:19+01:00 First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification Dupont, Sam Hall, Emilie Calosi, Piero Lundve, Bengt 2014-11 application/pdf https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/ https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/1/Sam_Dupont_et_al_decembre2014.pdf https://doi.org/10.2983/035.033.0320 fr fre https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/1/Sam_Dupont_et_al_decembre2014.pdf Dupont, Sam, Hall, Emilie, Calosi, Piero orcid:0000-0003-3378-2603 et Lundve, Bengt (2014). First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification. Journal of Shellfish Research, 33 (3). pp. 857-861. Article Évalué par les pairs 2014 ftunivquebecar https://doi.org/10.2983/035.033.0320 2023-10-07T23:10:41Z Understanding how seafood will be influenced by coming environmental changes such as ocean acidification is a research priority. One major gap in knowledge relates to the fact that many experiments are not considering relevant end points related directly to production (e.g., size, survival) and product quality (e.g., sensory quality) that can have important repercussions for consumers and the seafood market. The aim of this experiment was to compare the survival and sensory quality of the adult northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis) exposed for 3 wk to a temperature at the extreme of its thermal tolerance (11°C) and 2 pH treatments: pH 8.0 (the current average pH at the sampling site) and pH 7.5 (which is out of the current natural variability and relevant to near-future ocean acidification). Results show that decreased pH increased mortality significantly, by 63%. Sensory quality was assessed through semiqualitative scoring by a panel of 30 local connoisseurs. They were asked to rate 4 shrimp (2 from each pH treatment) for 3 parameters: appearance, texture and taste. Decreased pH reduced the score significantly for appearance and taste, but not texture. As a consequence, shrimp maintained in pH8.0 had a 3.4 times increased probability to be scored as the best shrimp on the plate, whereas shrimp from the pH 7.5 treatment had a 2.6 times more chance to be scored as the least desirable shrimp on the plate. These results help to prove the concept that ocean acidification can modulate sensory quality of the northern shrimp P. borealis. More research is now needed to evaluate impacts on other seafood species, socioeconomic consequences, and potential options. -- Keywords : acidification appearance northern shrimp Pandalus borealis pH Taste texture. Article in Journal/Newspaper northern shrimp Ocean acidification Pandalus borealis Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR): Sémaphore Journal of Shellfish Research 33 3 857 861
institution Open Polar
collection Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR): Sémaphore
op_collection_id ftunivquebecar
language French
description Understanding how seafood will be influenced by coming environmental changes such as ocean acidification is a research priority. One major gap in knowledge relates to the fact that many experiments are not considering relevant end points related directly to production (e.g., size, survival) and product quality (e.g., sensory quality) that can have important repercussions for consumers and the seafood market. The aim of this experiment was to compare the survival and sensory quality of the adult northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis) exposed for 3 wk to a temperature at the extreme of its thermal tolerance (11°C) and 2 pH treatments: pH 8.0 (the current average pH at the sampling site) and pH 7.5 (which is out of the current natural variability and relevant to near-future ocean acidification). Results show that decreased pH increased mortality significantly, by 63%. Sensory quality was assessed through semiqualitative scoring by a panel of 30 local connoisseurs. They were asked to rate 4 shrimp (2 from each pH treatment) for 3 parameters: appearance, texture and taste. Decreased pH reduced the score significantly for appearance and taste, but not texture. As a consequence, shrimp maintained in pH8.0 had a 3.4 times increased probability to be scored as the best shrimp on the plate, whereas shrimp from the pH 7.5 treatment had a 2.6 times more chance to be scored as the least desirable shrimp on the plate. These results help to prove the concept that ocean acidification can modulate sensory quality of the northern shrimp P. borealis. More research is now needed to evaluate impacts on other seafood species, socioeconomic consequences, and potential options. -- Keywords : acidification appearance northern shrimp Pandalus borealis pH Taste texture.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dupont, Sam
Hall, Emilie
Calosi, Piero
Lundve, Bengt
spellingShingle Dupont, Sam
Hall, Emilie
Calosi, Piero
Lundve, Bengt
First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
author_facet Dupont, Sam
Hall, Emilie
Calosi, Piero
Lundve, Bengt
author_sort Dupont, Sam
title First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
title_short First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
title_full First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
title_fullStr First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
title_full_unstemmed First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification
title_sort first evidence of altered sensory quality in a shellfish exposed to decreased ph relevant to ocean acidification
publishDate 2014
url https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/
https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/1/Sam_Dupont_et_al_decembre2014.pdf
https://doi.org/10.2983/035.033.0320
genre northern shrimp
Ocean acidification
Pandalus borealis
genre_facet northern shrimp
Ocean acidification
Pandalus borealis
op_relation https://semaphore.uqar.ca/id/eprint/2170/1/Sam_Dupont_et_al_decembre2014.pdf
Dupont, Sam, Hall, Emilie, Calosi, Piero orcid:0000-0003-3378-2603 et Lundve, Bengt (2014). First Evidence of Altered Sensory Quality in a Shellfish Exposed to Decreased pH Relevant to Ocean Acidification. Journal of Shellfish Research, 33 (3). pp. 857-861.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2983/035.033.0320
container_title Journal of Shellfish Research
container_volume 33
container_issue 3
container_start_page 857
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