Response of Copepods to Elevated pCO2 and Environmental Copper as Co-Stressors - A Multigenerational Study

We examined the impacts of ocean acidification and copper as co-stressors on the reproduction and population level responses of the benthic copepod Tisbe battagliai across two generations. Naupliar production, growth, and cuticle elemental composition were determined for four pH values: 8.06 (contro...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:PLoS ONE
Main Authors: Fitzer, Susan, Caldwell, Gary S, Clare, Anthony S, Upstill-Goddard, Robert C, Bentley, Matthew G
Other Authors: Institute of Aquaculture, Newcastle University, orcid:0000-0003-3556-7624
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1893/26499
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0071257
http://dspace.stir.ac.uk/bitstream/1893/26499/1/journal.pone.0071257.PDF
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Summary:We examined the impacts of ocean acidification and copper as co-stressors on the reproduction and population level responses of the benthic copepod Tisbe battagliai across two generations. Naupliar production, growth, and cuticle elemental composition were determined for four pH values: 8.06 (control); 7.95; 7.82; 7.67, with copper addition to concentrations equivalent to those in benthic pore waters. An additive synergistic effect was observed; the decline in naupliar production was greater with added copper at decreasing pH than for decreasing pH alone. Naupliar production modelled for the two generations revealed a negative synergistic impact between ocean acidification and environmentally relevant copper concentrations. Conversely, copper addition enhanced copepod growth, with larger copepods produced at each pH compared to the impact of pH alone. Copepod digests revealed significantly reduced cuticle concentrations of sulphur, phosphorus and calcium under decreasing pH; further, copper uptake increased to toxic levels that lead to reduced naupliar production. These data suggest that ocean acidification will enhance copper bioavailability, resulting in larger, but less fecund individuals that may have an overall detrimental outcome for copepod populations. © 2013 Fitzer et al.