School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
School of Biological Earth and Environmental Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Mar;28(6):1972-1989. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16013. Epub 2021 Dec 18.
Ocean deoxygenation is one of the major consequences of climate change. In coastal waters, this process can be exacerbated by eutrophication, which is contributing to an alarming increase in the so-called 'dead zones' globally. Despite its severity, the effect of reduced dissolved oxygen has only been studied for a very limited number of organisms, compared to other climate change impacts such as ocean acidification and warming. Here, we experimentally assessed the response of sponges to moderate and severe simulated hypoxic events. We ran three laboratory experiments on four species from two different temperate oceans (NE Atlantic and SW Pacific). Sponges were exposed to a total of five hypoxic treatments, with increasing severity (3.3, 1.6, 0.5, 0.4 and 0.13 mg O L , over 7-12-days). We found that sponges are generally very tolerant of hypoxia. All the sponges survived in the experimental conditions, except Polymastia crocea, which showed significant mortality at the lowest oxygen concentration (0.13 mg O L , lethal median time: 286 h). In all species except Suberites carnosus, hypoxic conditions do not significantly affect respiration rate down to 0.4 mg O L , showing that sponges can uptake oxygen at very low concentrations in the surrounding environment. Importantly, sponges displayed species-specific phenotypic modifications in response to the hypoxic treatments, including physiological, morphological and behavioural changes. This phenotypic plasticity likely represents an adaptive strategy to live in reduced or low oxygen water. Our results also show that a single sponge species (i.e., Suberites australiensis) can display different strategies at different oxygen concentrations. Compared to other sessile organisms, sponges generally showed higher tolerance to hypoxia, suggesting that sponges could be favoured and survive in future deoxygenated oceans.
海洋脱氧是气候变化的主要后果之一。在沿海水域,这一过程可能会因富营养化而加剧,富营养化导致全球所谓的“死亡区”数量惊人地增加。尽管情况严重,但与海洋酸化和变暖等其他气候变化影响相比,人们对减少溶解氧的影响的研究仅限于非常有限数量的生物。在这里,我们通过实验评估了中度和重度模拟缺氧事件对海绵的影响。我们在来自两个不同温带海洋(东北大西洋和西南太平洋)的四个物种上进行了三个实验室实验。海绵总共暴露于五种缺氧处理中,严重程度逐渐增加(3.3、1.6、0.5、0.4 和 0.13mg O L ,持续 7-12 天)。我们发现海绵通常对缺氧有很强的耐受性。除了 Polymastia crocea 外,所有的海绵在实验条件下都存活了下来,Polymastia crocea 在最低氧浓度(0.13mg O L ,致死中值时间:286h)下表现出显著的死亡率。除了 Suberites carnosus 之外,在所有物种中,缺氧条件下的呼吸率在 0.4mg O L 以下不会显著降低,这表明海绵可以在周围环境中非常低的浓度下吸收氧气。重要的是,海绵对缺氧处理表现出特定于物种的表型修饰,包括生理、形态和行为变化。这种表型可塑性可能代表了一种在低氧或缺氧水中生存的适应策略。我们的研究结果还表明,一种单一的海绵物种(即 Suberites australiensis)可以在不同的氧浓度下表现出不同的策略。与其他固着生物相比,海绵通常对缺氧有更高的耐受性,这表明海绵可能在未来的脱氧海洋中受到青睐并生存下来。