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  • AWI_Coast; Coastal Ecology @ AWI  (1)
  • Abundance per volume; BIOACID; Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification; Number; Sample code/label; Time in days; Treatment  (1)
  • Abundance per volume; Climate change; Cluster of Excellence: The Future Ocean; Dry mass; Dry mass per individual; Event label; Fish; fish larvae; Food web; FutureOcean; Hydrozoa; Identification; KOSMOS_2015; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M1; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M2; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M3; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M4; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M5; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M6; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M7; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M8; KOSMOS Bergen; MESO; mesocosm; Mesocosm experiment; Mesocosm label; Ocean acidification; plankton; Treatment; Volume  (1)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-04-29
    Keywords: Abundance per volume; BIOACID; Biological Impacts of Ocean Acidification; Number; Sample code/label; Time in days; Treatment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 619 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schade, Franziska M; Clemmesen, Catriona; Wegner, K Mathias (2014): Within- and transgenerational effects of ocean acidification on life history of marine three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). Marine Biology, 161(7), 1667-1676, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-014-2450-6
    Publication Date: 2023-07-01
    Description: Some studies have demonstrated that elevated CO2 concentrations in ocean waters negatively impact metabolism and development of marine fish. Particularly,early developmental stages are probably more susceptible to ocean acidification due to insufficient regulations of their acid-base balance. Transgenerational acclimation can be an important mechanism to mediate impacts of increased CO2 on marine species, yet very little is known about the potential of parental effects in teleosts. Therefore, transgenerational effects were investigated on life history in juvenile three-spined sticklebacks Gasterosteus aculeatus by acclimating parents (collected in April 2012, 55°03?N, 8°44?E) and offspring to ambient (~400 µatm) and elevated (~1,000 µatm) CO2 levels and measured parental fecundity as well as offspring survival, growth and otolith characteristics. Exposure to elevated CO2 concentrations led to an increase in clutch size in adults as well as increased juvenile survival and growth rates between 60 and 90 days post-hatch and enlarged otolith areas compared with fish from ambient CO2 concentrations. Moreover, transgenerational effects were observed in reduced survival and body size 30 days post-hatch as well as in enlarged otoliths at the end of the experiment, when fathers or both parents were acclimated to the high-CO2 environment. These results may suggest that elevated CO2 concentrations had rather positive effects on life-history traits of three-spined sticklebacks, but that parental acclimation can modify these effects without improving offspring fitness. Although the mechanistic basis of such transgenerational acclimation remains unclear, selective gradients within generations seem to determine the direction of transgenerational effects.
    Keywords: AWI_Coast; Coastal Ecology @ AWI
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-11-02
    Description: To evaluate the influence of ocean acidification on predatory plankton, e.g. Hydrozoa and fish larvae as well as their interaction in complex natural communities, we deployed eight pelagic mesocosms for 53 days (Mai to July) in Raunefjord, Norway, and enclosed 60 m³ of local seawater containing a natural plankton community under post-bloom conditions. Four mesocosms were manipulated to simulate extreme pCO2 levels of 2069 µatm while the other four served as untreated controls. To investigate the interaction between Hydrozoa and fish larvae influenced by OA ee studied OA-induced changes at the top of the food web by following ≈2000 larvae of Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) hatched inside each mesocosm during the first week of the experiment, and a Hydrozoa population that had already established inside the mesocosms. Organisms of both taxa inside and outside the mesocosms were measured over the course of the experiment in regular intervals. The data stems from 55µm and 500µm Apstein net hauls, subsequent microscopic analyses as well as carbon to nitrogen measurements. Under OA, we detected 20% higher abundance of hydromedusae staged jellyfish, but 25% lower biomass. At the same time, survival rates of Atlantic herring larvae were higher under OA (control pCO2: 0.1%, high pCO2: 1.7%) in the final phase of the study.
    Keywords: Abundance per volume; Climate change; Cluster of Excellence: The Future Ocean; Dry mass; Dry mass per individual; Event label; Fish; fish larvae; Food web; FutureOcean; Hydrozoa; Identification; KOSMOS_2015; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M1; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M2; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M3; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M4; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M5; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M6; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M7; KOSMOS_2015_Mesocosm-M8; KOSMOS Bergen; MESO; mesocosm; Mesocosm experiment; Mesocosm label; Ocean acidification; plankton; Treatment; Volume
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 304 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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