“…By contrast, fish were initially believed to be safe from the effects of OA, as early studies demonstrated a lack of mortality under extremely high CO 2 levels (greater than 10 000 matm) [5]. However, an increasing body of evidence suggests that OA-relevant CO 2 /pH levels induce various sublethal effects in fish, including otolith over-growth [6,7], a shift in behavioural lateralization [8,9], alterations in olfaction that affect detection of cues from substrates, parents [10], prey [11] and predators [8,12,13], and impaired learning [9,14]. Because the gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABA A ) receptor antagonist, gabazine, restores proper discrimination of predator odour, learning of predatory cues [14] and behavioural lateralization in OA-exposed fish [8], at least some of the deleterious effects of OA in fish seem to be related to altered neurotransmitter function.…”