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Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Early Life-History Stages and Settlement of the Coral-Eating Sea StarAcanthaster planci

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, December 2013
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Title
Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Early Life-History Stages and Settlement of the Coral-Eating Sea StarAcanthaster planci
Published in
PLOS ONE, December 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0082938
Pubmed ID
Authors

Sven Uthicke, Danilo Pecorino, Rebecca Albright, Andrew Peter Negri, Neal Cantin, Michelle Liddy, Symon Dworjanyn, Pamela Kamya, Maria Byrne, Miles Lamare

Abstract

Coral reefs are marine biodiversity hotspots, but their existence is threatened by global change and local pressures such as land-runoff and overfishing. Population explosions of coral-eating crown of thorns sea stars (COTS) are a major contributor to recent decline in coral cover on the Great Barrier Reef. Here, we investigate how projected near-future ocean acidification (OA) conditions can affect early life history stages of COTS, by investigating important milestones including sperm motility, fertilisation rates, and larval development and settlement. OA (increased pCO2 to 900-1200 µatm pCO2) significantly reduced sperm motility and, to a lesser extent, velocity, which strongly reduced fertilization rates at environmentally relevant sperm concentrations. Normal development of 10 d old larvae was significantly lower under elevated pCO2 but larval size was not significantly different between treatments. Settlement of COTS larvae was significantly reduced on crustose coralline algae (known settlement inducers of COTS) that had been exposed to OA conditions for 85 d prior to settlement assays. Effect size analyses illustrated that reduced settlement may be the largest bottleneck for overall juvenile production. Results indicate that reductions in fertilisation and settlement success alone would reduce COTS population replenishment by over 50%. However, it is unlikely that this effect is sufficient to provide respite for corals from other negative anthropogenic impacts and direct stress from OA and warming on corals.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Belgium 3 2%
France 2 1%
Australia 1 <1%
Germany 1 <1%
South Africa 1 <1%
Sweden 1 <1%
Mexico 1 <1%
China 1 <1%
Unknown 168 94%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 38 21%
Researcher 31 17%
Student > Master 29 16%
Student > Bachelor 15 8%
Other 12 7%
Other 25 14%
Unknown 29 16%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 94 53%
Environmental Science 28 16%
Earth and Planetary Sciences 6 3%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 4 2%
Business, Management and Accounting 3 2%
Other 10 6%
Unknown 34 19%