Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, 647 Contees Wharf Road, Edgewater, Maryland, 21037, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2021 Jun;31(4):e02315. doi: 10.1002/eap.2315. Epub 2021 Mar 31.
Organisms are increasingly likely to be exposed to multiple stressors repeatedly across ontogeny as climate change and other anthropogenic stressors intensify. Early life stages can be particularly sensitive to environmental stress, such that experiences early in life can "carry over" to have long-term effects on organism fitness. Despite the potential importance of these within-generation carryover effects, we have little understanding of how they vary across ecological contexts, particularly when organisms are re-exposed to the same stressors later in life. In coastal marine systems, anthropogenic nutrients and warming water temperatures are reducing average dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations while also increasing the severity of naturally occurring daily fluctuations in DO. Combined effects of warming and diel-cycling DO can strongly affect the fitness and survival of coastal organisms, including the eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica), a critical ecosystem engineer and fishery species. However, whether early life exposure to hypoxia and warming affects oysters' subsequent response to these stressors is unknown. Using a multiphase laboratory experiment, we explored how early life exposure to diel-cycling hypoxia and warming affected oyster growth when oysters were exposed to these same stressors 8 weeks later. We found strong, interactive effects of early life exposure to diel-cycling hypoxia and warming on oyster tissue : shell growth, and these effects were context-dependent, only manifesting when oysters were exposed to these stressors again two months later. This change in energy allocation based on early life stress exposure may have important impacts on oyster fitness. Exposure to hypoxia and warming also influenced oyster tissue and shell growth, but only later in life. Our results show that organisms' responses to current stress can be strongly shaped by their previous stress exposure, and that context-dependent carryover effects may influence the fitness, production, and restoration of species of management concern, particularly for sessile species such as oysters.
生物在个体发育过程中越来越有可能反复暴露于多种胁迫因素下,因为气候变化和其他人为胁迫因素正在加剧。生命早期阶段可能对环境胁迫特别敏感,以至于生命早期的经历可以“延续”对生物适应性产生长期影响。尽管这种代内延续效应可能非常重要,但我们对它们如何在生态环境中变化知之甚少,特别是当生物体在以后的生活中再次暴露于相同的胁迫因素时。在沿海海洋系统中,人为营养物和变暖的水温降低了平均溶解氧 (DO) 浓度,同时增加了 DO 自然发生的每日波动的严重程度。变暖与昼夜 DO 循环的综合影响会强烈影响沿海生物的适应性和生存能力,包括东方牡蛎(Crassostrea virginica),一种关键的生态系统工程师和渔业物种。然而,早期生活中暴露于低氧和变暖是否会影响牡蛎随后对这些胁迫因素的反应尚不清楚。使用多相实验室实验,我们探讨了早期生活中暴露于昼夜 DO 循环低氧和变暖如何影响牡蛎的生长,当牡蛎在 8 周后暴露于相同的胁迫因素时。我们发现早期生活中暴露于昼夜 DO 循环低氧和变暖对牡蛎组织的影响具有强烈的交互作用:壳生长,并且这些影响取决于环境,仅在两个月后再次暴露于这些胁迫因素时才表现出来。这种基于早期生活压力暴露的能量分配变化可能对牡蛎的适应性产生重要影响。暴露于低氧和变暖也会影响牡蛎组织和壳的生长,但仅在后期。我们的结果表明,生物体对当前胁迫的反应可以强烈地受到其以前的应激暴露的影响,并且依赖于环境的延续效应可能会影响管理关注物种的适应性、生产力和恢复,特别是对于牡蛎等固着物种。