The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria

Global ocean acidification may be causing an increase in abundance of medusoid hydrozoans. Many medusoid hydrozoans are predators of epipelagic crustaceans and ecological competitors of fish for epipelagic prey. A change in this predator-prey dynamic may affect the entire epipelagic ecosystem. Ocean...

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Main Author: Huang, Taya
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Friday Harbor Laboratories 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27028
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spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/27028 2023-05-15T17:49:09+02:00 The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria Huang, Taya 2012-07 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27028 en_US eng Friday Harbor Laboratories Marine Invertebrate Zoology;SummerA, 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27028 Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria Ocean Acidification Feeding Rate Other 2012 ftunivwashington 2023-03-12T18:51:56Z Global ocean acidification may be causing an increase in abundance of medusoid hydrozoans. Many medusoid hydrozoans are predators of epipelagic crustaceans and ecological competitors of fish for epipelagic prey. A change in this predator-prey dynamic may affect the entire epipelagic ecosystem. Ocean acidification exerts a physiological stress on planktonic crustaceans, which possess calcareous exoskeleton. It is therefore hypothesized that ocean acidification increases the feeding rate of medusoid hydrozoan on crustacean prey. This project aims to investigate the relationship between feeding rates of hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria on crustacean prey Artemia sp., under variable seawater CO2 concentrations: 450ppm CO2 and 950ppm CO2 . Each individual of A. Victoria was given 50 individual Artemia sp. and let feed for 1h under ambient temperature. Clearance rate was then calculated from the raw count of prey remaining after 1h. There is no statistically significant difference between the clearance rates of A. Victoria among the two treatment conditions and ambient seawater (n=5~9, p>0.05). However, median of clearance rate under 950ppm CO2 treatment condition was higher than that under 450ppm CO2 treatment condition, suggesting a possible general trend. 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 Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
Ocean Acidification
Feeding Rate
spellingShingle Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
Ocean Acidification
Feeding Rate
Huang, Taya
The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
topic_facet Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
Ocean Acidification
Feeding Rate
description Global ocean acidification may be causing an increase in abundance of medusoid hydrozoans. Many medusoid hydrozoans are predators of epipelagic crustaceans and ecological competitors of fish for epipelagic prey. A change in this predator-prey dynamic may affect the entire epipelagic ecosystem. Ocean acidification exerts a physiological stress on planktonic crustaceans, which possess calcareous exoskeleton. It is therefore hypothesized that ocean acidification increases the feeding rate of medusoid hydrozoan on crustacean prey. This project aims to investigate the relationship between feeding rates of hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria on crustacean prey Artemia sp., under variable seawater CO2 concentrations: 450ppm CO2 and 950ppm CO2 . Each individual of A. Victoria was given 50 individual Artemia sp. and let feed for 1h under ambient temperature. Clearance rate was then calculated from the raw count of prey remaining after 1h. There is no statistically significant difference between the clearance rates of A. Victoria among the two treatment conditions and ambient seawater (n=5~9, p>0.05). However, median of clearance rate under 950ppm CO2 treatment condition was higher than that under 450ppm CO2 treatment condition, suggesting a possible general trend.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Huang, Taya
author_facet Huang, Taya
author_sort Huang, Taya
title The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
title_short The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
title_full The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
title_fullStr The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Ocean Acidification on Feeding Rate of Hydromedusa Aequorea Victoria
title_sort effect of ocean acidification on feeding rate of hydromedusa aequorea victoria
publisher Friday Harbor Laboratories
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27028
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Marine Invertebrate Zoology;SummerA, 2012
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/27028
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