Oxygen conditions affect the swimming behavior of sand dollar larvae
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Anderson, Nicolas
Taveras Lopez, Sixto
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Abstract
Larval swimming behavior is not only critical to the survival and dispersal of marine
invertebrates, but also has larger implications for population dynamics in species with planktonic
larvae. However, little is known about these behaviors under variable oxygen conditions. Prior
works present conflicting results, with marine invertebrate larvae demonstrating either increased
or decreased swimming speeds under low-oxygen conditions when compared to normoxic
conditions. Low-oxygen conditions, or hypoxia, can range from 2-5 mg of oxygen per liter of
water depending on the group defining the standard (Gobler & Baumann, 2016). Normoxic
conditions are anything over 7-8 mg of oxygen per liter of water. Hypoxic conditions are common
among coastal zones and will expand with climate change (Gobler & Baumann, 2016). We used
video techniques to track the vertical swimming speed of sand dollar Dendraster excentricus larvae
in hypoxic, normoxic, and stratified conditions. Results demonstrated an increase in vertical
swimming speed in hypoxic conditions, while swimming in stratified conditions showed no effect.
This implies that larvae are capable of responding to hypoxic conditions by way of escaping lowoxygen
environments. These results demonstrate that low-oxygen conditions could cause an
escape behavior response and therefore should be considered when modeling larval survival and
dispersal.
