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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-12-12
    Description: 〈title xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"〉Abstract〈/title〉〈p xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xml:lang="en"〉Global warming, bioinvasions, and parasitism affect single‐species performances and species interactions, substantially impacting the structure and stability of marine ecosystems. In light of accelerated global change, the information derived from studies focusing on single species and single drivers is insufficient, calling for a multi‐stressor approach under near‐natural conditions. We investigated the effects of warming (+3°C) on the performance of a benthic community composed of native and invasive macroalgae, consumers and a trematode parasite in a mesocosm setting. We also assessed the effects of warming and parasitism on the survival and growth of gastropods and mussels and the thermal dependency of trematode performance. Our findings show that warming and grazing by infected gastropods had a large detrimental effect on the invasive macroalga growth. Furthermore, the single and interactive effects of parasitism and warming were detrimental to intermediate host survival and growth, especially to large mussels. Finally, cercarial emergence positively correlated to the natural peaks of summer temperatures, while infection intensity in mussels was higher in larger individuals. Our findings suggest that grazing and warming will be detrimental to the invasive macroalga, favoring the native alga. Moreover, parasitism will enhance grazing, especially in summer, when higher temperatures trigger parasite development. However, parasite‐enhanced grazing may be buffered by higher mortality or a shift in the size of infected intermediate hosts under warming. Our findings demonstrate how complex effects of ocean warming can be on food webs and how they can be mediated by parasitism and, as a result, influence native and invasive macroalgae differently.〈/p〉
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Keywords: ddc:577.7 ; Baltic community ; climate change ; bioinvasions ; parasitism ; interactive effects ; macroalgae growth
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: In this experiment, we assessed the different transmission steps from the first to the second intermediate host: i) cercarial emergence from periwinkles, ii) cercarial activity and survival after emergence, iii) cercarial infectivity in mussels, and iv) susceptibility of mussels to cercarial infection. For iii) cercariae were treated but not the mussels, whereas for iv) mussels were treated but not the cercariae. The experiment was run in August-September 2017 in the climate chambers of GEOMAR in Kiel. All experiments were conducted using temperature and salinity (fully crossed) as well as time (only for cercarial output) as fixed factors, and periwinkle/mussel identity nested within water bath as random factor. Temperature levels applied were 19 and 23°C. Salinity levels applied were 13, 16 and 19.
    Keywords: infectivity; Littorina littorea; Mytilus galloprovincialis; Salinity; trematode
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-01-30
    Description: Data sets are outputs of two experiments (each experiment includes two or more temporally replicated trials - named by date) that were conducted using a newly developed Fluorometer and Oximeter equipped Flow-through Setup (FOFS). The corresponding method paper is titled 'Simultaneous recording of filtration and respiration in marine organisms in response to short-term environmental variability'. The paper is under review by Limnology and Oceanography: Methods. The main directory of experimental data (e.g., FOFS_test/blank_trials) contain subdirectories termed raw_data_temperature (including °C-temperature .xlsx files), raw_data_Chl, and raw_data_Oxygen, the two latter contains folders named after the starting dates of the trials (e.g., 04_nov). Each of these folders has three subfolders named after the three stages of the trial (i.e., pre, main, and post). Each subfolder includes data sheets of mV-Chl (.CSV) or %air-saturation (.xlxs, which are outputs of the DO calulator.py) that were collected in the corresponding stage and trial. The data can be processed through the Python scripts accompanying the method paper, providing time-series of filtration, respiration, and scope for growth along daily thermal cycles for the studied blue mussel Mytilus spp. specimens (see the paper for details).
    Keywords: daily; ecology; energetics; fluctuations; functional traits; Python; warming
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6.7 MBytes
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-26
    Description: Cercarial emergence was assessed by counting all cercariae that emerged from single periwinkles exposed to the different treatments. Periwinkles were collected in Årøsund, Denmark and screened in the laboratory to verify the infection status. To measure cercarial emergence, periwinkles were individually transferred from the jars into 50 mL Plexiglas beakers, one day after the 7-days acclimation (sampling 1), one week after the start of exposure to the treatments (sampling 2), and two weeks after the start of exposure to the treatments (sampling 3). Each incubation lasted eight hours. At the end of the incubation period, the water from each beaker was transferred into 50 mL Falcon tubes. In addition, the beakers were immediately washed with 5 mL ethanol (99%), and the solution was also added to the Falcon tube to ensure the collection of all cercariae and their preservation for later counting.
    Keywords: Himasthla elongata, per infected host individual; Identification; infectivity; Littorina littorea; Mytilus galloprovincialis; Salinity; Sampling; Species; Treatment; Treatment: temperature; trematode
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1300 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-26
    Description: For cercarial activity and survival infected periwinkles were acclimated for three weeks under the different treatments (n=10 individuals per treatment) and incubated to allow for cercarial release. At the start of the experiment, approximately 45 cercariae per treatment were added individually to wells of three 96-well plates The 96-well plates were then exposed to the different temperature treatments placing them in the six thermobaths (three 96-well plates per treatment combination). Activity and survival were then assessed under a stereomicroscope after 4, 6, 9, 18, 27, and 45 hours. Cercariae were considered fully active when they were constantly swirling around (category: fully active). When laying at the bottom and not reacting, these were considered dead (category: dead), when still reacting, even if slowly, these were still considered alive (category: alive). This last category included "fully active".
    Keywords: Identification; infectivity; Littorina littorea; Mytilus galloprovincialis; Salinity; Species; Status; Time in hours; Treatment; Treatment: temperature; trematode; Variable
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2600 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-01-26
    Description: The infectivity of H. elongata cercariae was investigated by counting metacercariae in M. edulis, after a standardized exposure to cercariae acclimated at different temperatures and salinities. Mussels were collected two days prior to the start of the assays from the Kieler Meeresfarm. Then, A total of 72 mussels (n=12 for each treatment combination) were individually placed in 50 mL beakers at the respective temperatures and salinities, and exposed to a standardized number of cercariae released from the all periwinkles from the different treatment combinations. In each water bath, four beakers per salinity combination were placed. The 16-23°C treatment only five mussels where infected with 20 cercariae each due to the low number of cercariae obtained from such pre-treated periwinkles. The 13-23°C treatment was excluded from the analyses due to extremely low numbers of cercariae released under this particular treatment combination. The beakers with mussels were then incubated for 24 hours. After the incubation, each mussel was collected, dissected, and H. elongata metacercariae were identified and counted under a stereomicroscope. The effects of temperature and salinity on the susceptibility of M. edulis to infection by H. elongata cercariae were assessed by acclimating mussels to the above-mentioned treatment combinations (salinity x temperature) for one week, before these were exposed to non-acclimated cercariae. The exposure to cercariae of each mussel (n=12 mussels per treatment) was realized as described for Exp. III. Beakers with mussels were incubated at the different treatments for 24 hours. Mussels were then dissected and the number of metacercariae in each mussel (squeezed between two glass plates) was counted under a stereomicroscope.
    Keywords: Identification; infectivity; Littorina littorea; Mytilus galloprovincialis; Salinity; Species; Treatment; Treatment: temperature; Trematoda, metacercaria; trematode; Variable
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 875 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-19
    Description: In this study, we examined how chemical cues from a predatory marine crab affect the transmission of a parasitic trematode from its first (periwinkle) to its second (mussel) intermediate host. We collected the data in a laboratory experiment. Here, snails (Littorina littorea) infected with a parasite (Himasthla elongata) were kept in two different treatments (with predation risk and control). Subsequently, the excreted cercariae were collected as data. The experiments were conducted at the Wadden Sea Station of the Alfred Wegener Institute in List, Sylt, Germany. We sampled the snails at the the Danish coast of the Baltic Sea (Jütland, Arosund; 55*15'45.8'N 9*42'39.2'E). Snails had a shell height of 14-18mm corresponding to an age of two years. Infection status were screened at the laboratory. The crabs for the predation cue were sampled at the Oddewatt, List Sylt (German, Wadden Sea). Only male crabs with a size og 20-30mm catapace width were sampled. The blue mussels were sampled at the west coast of Sylt (Wenningstedt beach) were trematode infection do not occur naturally (confirmed by screening 50 mussels). Mussel shell length wars 25-30mm. Sampling of the experimental organisms: Mytilus edulis (latitude:54.937.600, longitude: 8.312.915); Littorina littorea (latitude55.262.722:longitude:9.710.889 ) and Hemigrapsus takanoi (latitude:55.028.713longitude:8.434.260 ).
    Keywords: blue mussel; crab predator; Laboratory experiment; parasite-host-system; predation risk effects; risk-induced; trematode; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-01-19
    Description: In this study, we examined how chemical cues from a predatory marine crab affect the transmission of a parasitic trematode from its first (periwinkle) to its second (mussel) intermediate host. We collected the data in a laboratory experiment. Here, snails (Littorina littorea) infected with a parasite (Himasthla elongata) were kept in two different treatments (with predation risk and control). Subsequently, the excreted cercariae were collected as data. The experiments were conducted at the Wadden Sea Station of the Alfred Wegener Institute in List, Sylt, Germany. We sampled the snails at the the Danish coast of the Baltic Sea (Jütland, Arosund; 55*15'45.8'N 9*42'39.2'E). Snails had a shell height of 14-18mm corresponding to an age of two years. Infection status were screened at the laboratory. The crabs for the predation cue were sampled at the Oddewatt, List Sylt (German, Wadden Sea). Only male crabs with a size og 20-30mm catapace width were sampled. The blue mussels were sampled at the west coast of Sylt (Wenningstedt beach) were trematode infection do not occur naturally (confirmed by screening 50 mussels). Mussel shell length wars 25-30mm.
    Keywords: BIO; Biology; blue mussel; crab predator; Himasthla elongata, cercariae, per infected host; Identification; Island of Sylt, Germany; Juetland_Arosund; Laboratory experiment; List/Sylt; MULT; Multiple investigations; North Sea; Oddewatt_Sylt; parasite-host-system; predation risk effects; risk-induced; Treatment; trematode; Wadden Sea; Wenningstedt_beach
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 108 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-01-19
    Description: In this study, we examined how chemical cues from a predatory marine crab affect the transmission of a parasitic trematode from its first (periwinkle) to its second (mussel) intermediate host. We collected the data in a laboratory experiment. Here, snails (Littorina littorea) infected with a parasite (Himasthla elongata) were kept in two different treatments (with predation risk and control). Subsequently, the excreted cercariae were collected as data. The experiments were conducted at the Wadden Sea Station of the Alfred Wegener Institute in List, Sylt, Germany. We sampled the snails at the the Danish coast of the Baltic Sea (Jütland, Arosund; 55*15'45.8'N 9*42'39.2'E). Snails had a shell height of 14-18mm corresponding to an age of two years. Infection status were screened at the laboratory. The crabs for the predation cue were sampled at the Oddewatt, List Sylt (German, Wadden Sea). Only male crabs with a size og 20-30mm catapace width were sampled. The blue mussels were sampled at the west coast of Sylt (Wenningstedt beach) were trematode infection do not occur naturally (confirmed by screening 50 mussels).
    Keywords: BIO; Biology; blue mussel; crab predator; Date/time start, experiment; Himasthla elongata, cercariae, per infected host; Host; Island of Sylt, Germany; Juetland_Arosund; Laboratory; Laboratory experiment; List/Sylt; MULT; Multiple investigations; North Sea; Oddewatt_Sylt; parasite-host-system; predation risk effects; Predator; risk-induced; Treatment; trematode; Wadden Sea; Wenningstedt_beach
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 288 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-01-19
    Description: In this study, we examined how chemical cues from a predatory marine crab affect the transmission of a parasitic trematode from its first (periwinkle) to its second (mussel) intermediate host. We collected the data in a laboratory experiment. Here, snails (Littorina littorea) infected with a parasite (Himasthla elongata) were kept in two different treatments (with predation risk and control). Subsequently, the excreted cercariae were collected as data. The experiments were conducted at the Wadden Sea Station of the Alfred Wegener Institute in List, Sylt, Germany. We sampled the snails at the the Danish coast of the Baltic Sea (Jütland, Arosund; 55*15'45.8'N 9*42'39.2'E). Snails had a shell height of 14-18mm corresponding to an age of two years. Infection status were screened at the laboratory. The crabs for the predation cue were sampled at the Oddewatt, List Sylt (German, Wadden Sea). Only male crabs with a size og 20-30mm catapace width were sampled. The blue mussels were sampled at the west coast of Sylt (Wenningstedt beach) were trematode infection do not occur naturally (confirmed by screening 50 mussels). Mussel shell length wars 25-30mm.
    Keywords: BIO; Biology; blue mussel; crab predator; Himasthla elongata, cercariae, per infected host; Island of Sylt, Germany; Juetland_Arosund; List/Sylt; MULT; Multiple investigations; North Sea; Oddewatt_Sylt; ORDINAL NUMBER; parasite-host-system; predation risk effects; risk-induced; Treatment; trematode; Wadden Sea; Wenningstedt_beach
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 80 data points
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