Effects of Ocean Acidification on Lottia scutum Settlement
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Rodriguez, Leeza-Marie
Richmond, Keana
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Abstract
The effects of ocean acidification on calcifying marine organisms are becoming more
pronounced as atmospheric CO2 levels have increased due to anthropogenic carbon emissions
(Etheridge et al., 1996). Studies on these effects have also increased over time. Ocean acidification
(OA) has been shown to affect the feeding behavior and metabolic rates of larvae in a number of
species (Vargas et al., 2013; Pan et al., 2015). Metabolic changes can significantly influence
developmental rates, but little is still known about consequences of OA for non-feeding marine
invertebrate larvae. In this study, we focus on the effects of OA conditions on the larval stage of
Lottia scutum, a Pacific rocky intertidal limpet species that ranges from Alaska to southern
California. Larvae were exposed to OA conditions (pH 7.3) at competency stage and monitored
for settlement behavior and metamorphosis. Our results indicate that L. scutum larvae were able
to successfully settle in OA and ambient seawater treatments. We did not find a negative effect of
the specific OA conditions used in this study on the settlement of L. scutum. These findings provide
insight into how environmental stress might affect early life stages, as well as how marine
invertebrate larvae from regularly low pH environments fare in OA conditions.
