Scientists at University of California Davis and San Francisco State
University have discovered that the combination of elevated levels of
carbon dioxide and an increase in ocean water temperature has a
significant impact on survival and development of the Antarctic
dragonfish (Gymnodraco acuticeps). The research article was published today in the journal Conservation Physiology.
The
study, which was the first to investigate the response to warming and
increased pCO2 (partial pressure of carbon dioxide) in a developing
Antarctic fish, assessed the effects of near-future ocean warming and
acidification on early embryos of the naked dragonfish, a shallow
benthic spawner exclusive to the circumpolar Antarctic. As the formation
of their embryos takes longer than many species (up to ten months),
this makes them particularly vulnerable to a change in chemical and
physical conditions.
The survival and metabolism of the dragonfish
embryo was measured over time in two different temperatures and three
pCO2 levels over a three-week period, which allowed the researchers to
assess potential vulnerability of developing dragonfish to future ocean
scenarios. The results showed that a near-future increase in ocean
temperature as well as acidification have the potential to significantly
alter the physiology and development of Antarctic fish. One of the
article’s authors, Assistant Professor Anne Todgham, explained that
“temperature will probably be the main driver of change, but increases
in pCO2 will also alter embryonic physiology, with responses dependent
on water temperature.”
Professor Todgham went on to say:
“Dragonfish embryos exhibited a synergistic increase in mortality when
elevated temperature was coupled with increased pCO2 over the course of
the three week experiment. While we predictably found that temperature
increased embryonic development, altered development due to increased
pCO2 was unexpected.” These unique findings show that single stressors
alone may not be sufficient to predict the effects on early development
of fish, as the negative effects of increased pCO2 may only manifest at
increased temperatures. They also show that fish may differ from other
marine invertebrate embryos in how they respond to pCO2.
The
faster development of the embryos in warmer and more acidic waters could
be bad news for the dragonfish. Hatching earlier, at the start of the
dark winter months when limited food resources are available, has the
potential to limit growth during critical periods of development.
Furthermore, impacts to survival would reduce numbers of embryos that
hatch and could impact dragonfish abundance.
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