CO2-driven ocean acidification repressed the growth of adult sea urchin Strongylocentrotus intermedius by impairing intestine function

MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN(2020)

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Abstract
Strongylocentrotus intermedius cultured in the northern Yellow Sea in China was utilized to evaluate the effects of chronic CO2-driven ocean acidification (OA) on adult sea urchins. Based on the projection of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), present natural seawater conditions (pH(NBS) = 8.10 +/- 0.03) and three laboratory-controlled OA conditions (OA(1), Delta pH(NBS) = - 0.3 units; OA(2) , Delta pH(NBS) = - 0.4 units; OA(3), Delta pH(NBS) = - 0.5 units) were employed. After 60-day incubation, our results showed that (1) OA significantly repressed the growth of adult S. intermedius; (2) food consumption tended to be decreased with pH decline; (3) intestinal morphology was changed, and activities of intestinal cellulase and lipase were decreased under acidified conditions; (4) expression levels of two immune-related genes (SiTNF14 and SiTGF-beta) were altered; (5) rate-limiting enzyme activities of the glycolytic pathway and tricarboxylic acid cycle (TAC) were changed in all OA treatments compared to those of controls.
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Key words
Feeding,Growth,Intestine function,Ocean acidification,Strongylocentrotus intermedius
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