Respiration, grazing, and defecation rates in Phyllaplysia taylori under crossed salinity/temperature acclimation

DOI

Highly dynamic environments like estuaries are home to organisms accustomed to wide fluctuations in environmental conditions. However, estuarine temperature and salinity conditions are expected to shift with climate change, potentially altering plant and animal physiology and consequently their ecological interactions. Phyllaplysia taylori, a sea hare that lives exclusively in nearshore eelgrass beds in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, is a positive ecological interactor with eelgrass by increasing eelgrass productivity through grazing removal of photosynthesis-blocking epiphytes. The central aim of our study is to understand how increasing temperature and salinity are likely to alter that ecological interaction. First, we determined salinity thresholds for survival of P. taylori at 20°C (typical summer temperature) for two weeks, and found that significant mortality occurs at salinity below 25 ppt. Then, we determined respiration rate, grazing rate and defecation rate of P. taylori following a crossed two-week acclimation at typical summer low- and high- temperatures (18 & 22°C) and salinities (27 & 33ppt). P. taylori respiration and grazing rates were elevated under low salinity and high temperature. To determine how P. taylori responds to very warm and extreme summer temperatures, we measured respiration rates at higher temperatures (26°C - very warm summer & 30°C - heat shock) and feeding rates following exposure to the 30°C heat shock. Irrespective of acclimation salinity, P. taylori acclimated to 18°C were more sensitive to heat shock as they had a larger increase in respiration rate at 30°C, and had reduced feeding rates following the 30°C exposure, whereas there was no reduction in feeding rate in 22°C acclimated specimens. This study provides the first data on the salinity and temperature sensitivity and metabolic physiology of P. taylori with relevance to their trophic position in the context of eelgrass ecosystems.

Across all files, a single row represents one individual sea hare. Three files contain data within the orthogonal temperature x salinity experiment and two contain data within the salinity limits experiment. All methods described fully in the main manuscript.

Supplement to: Tanner, Richelle L; Faye, Lindsay E; Stillman, Jonathon H (2019): Temperature and salinity sensitivity of respiration, grazing, and defecation rates in the estuarine eelgrass sea hare, Phyllaplysia taylori. Marine Biology, 166(8), 109

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.903705
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-019-3559-4
Metadata Access https://ws.pangaea.de/oai/provider?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite4&identifier=oai:pangaea.de:doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.903705
Provenance
Creator Tanner, Richelle L ORCID logo; Faye, Lindsay E; Stillman, Jonathon H ORCID logo
Publisher PANGAEA
Publication Year 2019
Rights Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Supplementary Publication Series of Datasets; Collection
Format application/zip
Size 5 datasets
Discipline Life Sciences; Medicine; Medicine and Health; Physiology
Spatial Coverage (-122.447 LON, 37.889 LAT); San Francisco Estuary