The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia

Global ocean acidification caused by an increase in absorbed CO2 is changing oceanic ecology world wide, however little is known on how this change will effect medusozoan Cnidarians (jellyfish). Many studies have predicted that lower pH may be causing an increase in the abundance of jellyfish, howev...

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Main Author: Martin, Bear
Language:English
Published: Friday Harbor Laboratories 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27017
id ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/27017
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spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/27017 2023-05-15T17:49:40+02:00 The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia Martin, Bear 2012-07 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27017 en_US eng Friday Harbor Laboratories Marine Invertebrate Zoology;SummerA, 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27017 Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia ocean acidification feeding rate 2012 ftunivwashington 2023-03-12T18:51:56Z Global ocean acidification caused by an increase in absorbed CO2 is changing oceanic ecology world wide, however little is known on how this change will effect medusozoan Cnidarians (jellyfish). Many studies have predicted that lower pH may be causing an increase in the abundance of jellyfish, however many more have refuted these results. Jellyfish are predators of epipelagic crustaceans and compete with fish for prey. A change in jellyfish population or feeding behavior may affect the entire pelagic ecosystem. This project aims to investigate the relationship between feeding rate of jellyfish Mitrocoma cellularia on crustacean prey Artemia spp., under variable seawater CO2 concentrations: ambient local seawater (about 700ppm), 400 ppm and 950 ppm. Feeding rates of M. cellularia were calculated and compared with those of Aequorea victoria under local seawater conditions and the feeding rate of A. victoria under CO2 treated saltwater conditions was calculated. It was found that M. cellularia had a faster feeding rate than A. victoria in ambient conditions (p=0.042). No significant difference was found among the feeding rates under the three water treatments (p= 0.297) however a slight trend of increasing feeding rate was observed as pH decreased. To understand how Ocean acidification affects medusozoan Cnidarians more refined methods are needed as well as an increase in trials. Other/Unknown Material Ocean acidification University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Hydrozoan Jellyfish
Mitrochoma cellularia
ocean acidification
feeding rate
spellingShingle Hydrozoan Jellyfish
Mitrochoma cellularia
ocean acidification
feeding rate
Martin, Bear
The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
topic_facet Hydrozoan Jellyfish
Mitrochoma cellularia
ocean acidification
feeding rate
description Global ocean acidification caused by an increase in absorbed CO2 is changing oceanic ecology world wide, however little is known on how this change will effect medusozoan Cnidarians (jellyfish). Many studies have predicted that lower pH may be causing an increase in the abundance of jellyfish, however many more have refuted these results. Jellyfish are predators of epipelagic crustaceans and compete with fish for prey. A change in jellyfish population or feeding behavior may affect the entire pelagic ecosystem. This project aims to investigate the relationship between feeding rate of jellyfish Mitrocoma cellularia on crustacean prey Artemia spp., under variable seawater CO2 concentrations: ambient local seawater (about 700ppm), 400 ppm and 950 ppm. Feeding rates of M. cellularia were calculated and compared with those of Aequorea victoria under local seawater conditions and the feeding rate of A. victoria under CO2 treated saltwater conditions was calculated. It was found that M. cellularia had a faster feeding rate than A. victoria in ambient conditions (p=0.042). No significant difference was found among the feeding rates under the three water treatments (p= 0.297) however a slight trend of increasing feeding rate was observed as pH decreased. To understand how Ocean acidification affects medusozoan Cnidarians more refined methods are needed as well as an increase in trials.
author Martin, Bear
author_facet Martin, Bear
author_sort Martin, Bear
title The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
title_short The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
title_full The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
title_fullStr The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydrozoan Jellyfish Mitrochoma cellularia
title_sort effect of ocean acidification on feeding rate of hydrozoan jellyfish mitrochoma cellularia
publisher Friday Harbor Laboratories
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27017
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Marine Invertebrate Zoology;SummerA, 2012
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27017
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