CO-induced aquatic acidification is predicted to affect fish neuronal GABA receptors leading to widespread behavioural alterations. However, the large variability in the magnitude and direction of behavioural responses suggests substantial species-specific CO threshold differences, life history and parental acclimation effects, experimental artifacts, or a combination of these factors. As an established model organism, zebrafish (Danio rerio) can be reared under stable conditions for multiple generations, which may help control for some of the variability observed in wild-caught fishes. Here, we used two standardized tests to investigate the effect of 1-week acclimatization to four pCO levels on zebrafish anxiety-like behaviour, exploratory behaviour, and locomotion. Fish acclimatized to 900 μatm CO demonstrated increased anxiety-like behaviour compared to control fish (~480 μatm), however, the behaviour of fish exposed to 2200 μatm CO was indistinguishable from that of controls. In addition, fish acclimatized to 4200 μatm CO had decreased anxiety-like behaviour; i.e. the opposite response than the 900 μatm CO treatment. On the other hand, exploratory behaviour did not differ among any of the pCO exposures that were tested. Thus, zebrafish behavioural responses to elevated pCO are not linear; with potential important implications for physiological, environmental, and aquatic acidification studies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146320 | DOI Listing |
Front Cell Dev Biol
January 2025
Department of Evolutionary Biology, Unit for Integrative Zoology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Bivalve mollusks are globally distributed in marine and freshwater habitats. While exhibiting a relatively uniform bodyplan that is characterized by their eponymous bivalved shell that houses the soft-bodied animal, many lineages have acquired unique morphological, physiological, and molecular innovations that account for their high adaptability to the various properties of aquatic environments such as salinity, flow conditions, or substrate composition. This renders them ideal candidates for studies into the evolutionary trajectories that have resulted in their diversity, but also makes them important players for research concerned with climate change-induced warming and acidification of aquatic habitats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
January 2025
Laboratory of Marine Protozoan Biodiversity and Evolution, Marine College, Shandong University, Weihai, China. Electronic address:
Cadmium (Cd) pollution is a widespread threat to aquatic life, and ongoing freshwater acidification (FA) can be expected to interact with Cd compounds to disrupt freshwater ecosystems. However, the effects of FA on Cd biotoxicity remain unclear. Herein, the model ciliate Paramecium tetraurelia, a model unicellular eukaryotic organism, was used to explore the response to environmental relevant concentrations of Cd under acidification conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
December 2024
NSW Department of Primary Industries, Port Stephens Fisheries Institute, Taylors Beach, NSW 2316, Australia.
Global oceans are warming and acidifying because of increasing greenhouse gas emissions that are anticipated to have cascading impacts on marine ecosystems and organisms, especially those essential for biodiversity and food security. Despite this concern, there remains some skepticism about the reproducibility and reliability of research done to predict future climate change impacts on marine organisms. Here, we present meta-analyses of over two decades of research on the climate change impacts on an ecologically and economically valuable Sydney rock oyster, .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
January 2025
The Swire Institute of Marine Science and School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, Hong Kong, China.
Global changes can profoundly affect the sex determination and reproductive output of marine organisms, disrupting the population structure and ecosystems. High COdriven low pH in the context of ocean acidification (OA) has been shown to severely affect various calcifiers, but less is known about the extent to which low pH influences sex determination and reproduction of marine organisms, particularly mollusks. This study is the first to report a biased sex ratio over multiple generations toward females, driven by exposure to high CO-induced low pH environments, using the ecologically and economically important Portuguese oyster () as a model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
January 2025
Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
In the 1980s, liming became a large-scale, governmentally supported restoration program implemented by many countries to mitigate the effects of acidification of freshwaters. Despite some 50 years of liming of thousands of lakes and streams, its efficacy remains largely debated. This study is the first of its kind to use paleolimnological reconstructions using both subfossil chironomid assemblages and their carbon stable isotopic composition to compare the ecological trajectories of limed and control (unlimed) lakes over the last 100 years in order to unravel the effects of liming on Scandinavian lakes.
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