Anthropogenic CO(2) emissions are acidifying the world's oceans. A growing body of evidence is showing that ocean acidification impacts growth and developmental rates of marine invertebrates. Here we test the impact of elevated seawater pCO(2) (129 Pa, 1271 μatm) on early development, larval metabolic and feeding rates in a marine model organism, the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Growth and development was assessed by measuring total body length, body rod length, postoral rod length and posterolateral rod length. Comparing these parameters between treatments suggests that larvae suffer from a developmental delay (by ca. 8%) rather than from the previously postulated reductions in size at comparable developmental stages. Further, we found maximum increases in respiration rates of +100% under elevated pCO(2), while body length corrected feeding rates did not differ between larvae from both treatments. Calculating scope for growth illustrates that larvae raised under high pCO(2) spent an average of 39 to 45% of the available energy for somatic growth, while control larvae could allocate between 78 and 80% of the available energy into growth processes. Our results highlight the importance of defining a standard frame of reference when comparing a given parameter between treatments, as observed differences can be easily due to comparison of different larval ages with their specific set of biological characters.
As a consequence of increasing atmospheric CO 2 , the world's oceans are becoming warmer and more acidic. Whilst the ecological effects of these changes are poorly understood, it has been suggested that fish performance including growth will be reduced mainly as a result of limitations in oxygen transport capacity. Contrary to the predictions given by the oxygen-and capacity-limited thermal tolerance hypothesis, we show that aerobic scope and cardiac performance of Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) increase following 14-16 weeks exposure to elevated temperatures and even more so in combination with CO 2 -acidified seawater. However, the increase does not translate into improved growth, demonstrating that oxygen uptake is not the limiting factor for growth performance at high temperatures. Instead, long-term exposure to CO 2 -acidified seawater reduces growth at temperatures that are frequently encountered by this species in nature, indicating that elevated atmospheric CO 2 levels may have serious implications on fish populations in the future.
All species of the Ophiuroidea have exceptional regenerative capabilities; in particular, they can replace arms lost following traumatic or self-induced amputation. In order to reconstruct this complex phenomenon, we studied arm regeneration in two diVerent ophiuroids, Ophioderma longicaudum (Retzius, 1805) and Amphiura Wliformis O. F. Müller, 1776, which are quite distantly related. These species present contrasting regeneration and diVerentiation rates and diVer in several ecological traits. The aim of this paper is to interpret the primary sequence of morphogenetic and histogenetic events leading to the complete reconstruction of a new arm, comparing the arm regenerative processes of these two ophiuroid species with those described in crinoids. Arm regeneration in ophiuroids is considered an epimorphic process in which new structures develop from a typical blastema formed from an accu-mulation of presumptive undiVerentiated cells. Our results showed that although very diVerent in some respects such as, for instance, the regeneration rate (0.17 mm/week for O. longicaudum and 0.99 mm/week for A. Wliformis), morphogenetic and histogenetic aspects are surprisingly similar in both species. The regenerative process presents similar characteristics and follows a developmental scheme which can be subdivided into four phases: a repair phase, an early regenerative phase, an intermediate regenerative phase and an advanced regenerative phase. In terms of histogenesis, the regenerative events involve the development of new structures from migratory pluripotent cells, which proliferate actively, in addition in both cases there is a signiWcant contribution from dediVerentiated cells, in particular ded-iVerentiating myocytes, although to varying extents. This evidence conWrms the plasticity of the regenerative phenomenon in echinoderms, which can apparently follow diVerent pathways in terms of growth and morphogenesis, but nevertheless involve both epimorphic and morphallactic contributions at the cellular level.
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