Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, The Environment Institute, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, The Environment Institute, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Oct 15;639:360-366. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.161. Epub 2018 May 20.
The CO-boosted trophic transfer from primary producers to herbivores has been increasingly discovered at natural CO vents and in laboratory experiments. Despite the emerging knowledge of this boosting effect, we do not know the extent to which it may be enhanced or dampened by ocean warming. We investigated whether ocean acidification and warming enhance the nutritional quality (C:N ratio) and energy content of turf algae, which is speculated to drive higher feeding rate, greater energy budget and eventually faster growth of herbivores. This proposal was tested by observing the physiological (feeding rate, respiration rate and energy budget) and demographic responses (growth and survival) of a common grazing gastropod (Phasianella australis) to ocean acidification and warming in a 6-month mesocosm experiment. Whilst we observed the boosting effect of ocean acidification and warming in isolation on the energy budget of herbivores by either increasing feeding rate on the more nutritious algae or increasing energy gain per feeding effort, their growth and survival were reduced by the sublethal thermal stress under ocean warming, especially when both climate change stressors were combined. This reduced growth and survival occurred as a consequence of depleted energy reserves, suggesting that the boosting effect via trophic transfer might not sufficiently compensate for the increased energy demand imposed by ocean warming. In circumstances where ocean acidification and warming create an energy demand on herbivores that outweighs the energy enhancement of their food (i.e. primary producers), the performance of herbivores to control their blooming resources likely deteriorates and thus runaway primary production ensues.
从初级生产者到食草动物的 CO 促进营养传递在自然 CO 喷口和实验室实验中越来越被发现。尽管人们对这种促进作用有了新的认识,但我们并不知道海洋变暖会在多大程度上增强或减弱这种作用。我们研究了海洋酸化和变暖是否会提高草坪藻类的营养质量(C:N 比)和能量含量,据推测,这会导致食草动物的摄食率更高、能量预算更大,最终生长更快。通过在为期 6 个月的中观实验中观察一种常见的食草腹足动物(Phasianella australis)的生理(摄食率、呼吸率和能量预算)和种群响应(生长和存活),来检验这一假说。虽然我们观察到海洋酸化和变暖在单独作用时通过增加对更有营养的藻类的摄食率或增加每次摄食的能量收益,从而对食草动物的能量预算产生促进作用,但由于海洋变暖引起的亚致死热应激,它们的生长和存活受到了抑制,尤其是当两种气候变化胁迫因素同时存在时。这种生长和存活的减少是由于能量储备的消耗,这表明通过营养传递的促进作用可能不足以补偿海洋变暖带来的能量需求增加。在海洋酸化和变暖对食草动物产生的能量需求超过其食物(即初级生产者)能量增强的情况下,食草动物控制其繁殖资源的能力可能会恶化,从而导致初级生产力失控。