The collector urchin, Tripneustes gratilla, is an ecologically important member of the grazing community of Hawai'i's coral reefs. Beyond its ability to maintain balance between native seaweeds and corals, T. gratilla has also been used as a food source and a biocontrol agent against alien invasive algae species. Due to overexploitation, habitat degradation, and other stressors, their populations face local extirpation. However, artificial reproductive techniques, such as cryopreservation, could provide more consistent seedstock throughout the year to supplement aquaculture efforts. Although the sperm and larvae of temperate urchins have been successfully cryopreserved, tropical urchins living on coral reefs have not. Here, we investigated the urchin embryos' tolerance to various cryoprotectants and cooling rates to develop a cryopreservation protocol for T. gratilla. We found that using 1 M Me2SO with a cooling rate of 9.7 °C/min on gastrula stage embryos produced the best results with survival rates of up to 85.5% and up to 50.8% maturation to the 4-arm echinopluteus stage, assessed three days after thawing. Continued research could see cryopreservation added to the repertoire of artificial reproductive techniques for T. gratilla, thereby assisting in the preservation of this ecologically important urchin, all while augmenting aquaculture efforts that contribute to coral reef restoration.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cryobiol.2024.104865 | DOI Listing |
PeerJ
May 2024
University of Applied Sciences Van Hall Larenstein, Leeuwarden, The Netherlands.
The mass mortality event of the herbivorous sea urchin in 1983-1984 has been a major contributor to the diminished resilience of coral reefs throughout the Caribbean. The reduction in grazing pressure resulted in algae proliferation, which inhibited coral recruitment after disturbances such as disease, hurricanes, pollution and climatic change induced marine heat waves. Natural recovery of after the 1983-1984 die-off has been slow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCryobiology
June 2024
Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawai'i, Kaneohe, HI, 96744, USA; Center for Species Survival, Smithsonian National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, Smithsonian Institution, Front Royal, VA, 22630, USA.
The collector urchin, Tripneustes gratilla, is an ecologically important member of the grazing community of Hawai'i's coral reefs. Beyond its ability to maintain balance between native seaweeds and corals, T. gratilla has also been used as a food source and a biocontrol agent against alien invasive algae species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
October 2023
Hawai'i Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawai'i, Kāne'ohe, HI, United States.
Dis Aquat Organ
February 2023
US Geological Survey, National Wildlife Health Center, Honolulu Field Station, Honolulu, Hawai`i, USA.
As grazers, sea urchins are keystone species in tropical marine ecosystems, and their loss can have important ecological ramifications. Die-offs of urchins are frequently described, but their causes are often unclear, in part because systematic examinations of animal tissues at gross and microscopic level are not done. In some areas, urchins are being employed to control invasive marine algae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicromachines (Basel)
September 2021
Institute of Advanced Wear & Corrosion Resistant and Functional Materials, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China.
Urchin-like tungsten oxide (WO) microspheres self-assembled with nanobelts are deposited on the surface of the hydrophilic carbon cloth (CC) current collector via hydrothermal reaction. The WO nanobelts in the urchin-like microspheres are in the hexagonal crystalline phase, and their widths are around 30-50 nm. The resulted hierarchical WO/CC electrode exhibits a capacitance of 3400 mF/cm in HSO electrolyte in the voltage window of -0.
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