Southeast Fisheries Science Center - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

Southeast Fisheries Science Center

Description:

Newly settled spat on tiles mounted to PVC palates. 5 gallon, flow-through ... Extensive baseline physiological characterization in the literature (Conch reef) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:19
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: mmi70
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Southeast Fisheries Science Center


1
Southeast Fisheries Science Center
  • Potential Contributions

2
SEFSC with local collaborators have potential to
fill gaps (relatively short term)
  • Organismal-level responses (laboratory)
  • Atlantic/Caribbean tropical/subtropical species
  • Under-represented in the literature so far
  • Early life stages
  • Fishes
  • Corals
  • including broadcasting species
  • ESA-listed A.palmata

UM/RSMAS (Langdon, Grosell), UM Experimental
Hatchery (Capo), AOML
3
Initial collaboration P. astreoides
settlersLangdon Albright (RSMAS)June 2007
  • Brooding species
  • Newly settled spat on tiles mounted to PVC
    palates
  • 5 gallon, flow-through aquaria
  • Duplicate aquaria for each treatment
  • Saturation states manipulated in 3 header tanks
    through acid additions (1M HCl)
  • Control 3.1
  • Mid 2.6
  • Low 2.1
  • System maintained at 25ºC, ambient light
  • Routinely monitored for growth rate -
    photographs

Photo R. Albright
4
P. astreoides Average Growth Rate (Days 1-56)
June
F0.05,2,38 16.9229, plt 0.0001
Low Oa 2.1
Control Oa 3.1
Middle Oa 2.6
Albright et al. unpubl data
5
  • P. astreoides larvae (brooded) showed no effect
    of saturation state on settlement
  • Broadcasting species likely to have more
    susceptibility
  • Limited energy reserves
  • Longer exposure in the water column
  • Similar experiments possible with broadcasting
    spp. in 2008
  • Hope to culture larval phase in saturation state
    treatments
  • Acropora palmata
  • Montastraea faveolata
  • Diploria strigosa

6
Likely to proceed in Aug 2008
Coral settlement assays on acid-conditioned
substrates (CCA regimes Kuffner et al. 08)
Langdons flow-through mesocosms 3 sat
states - UM Experimental Hatchery
7
Fishes
  • Though fishes relatively less susceptible, early
    life stages may be
  • With collaborators, SEFSC has capacity for
    exposure experiments with larval grouper,
    snapper, yellowfin tuna
  • Though otolith deposition may not be expected to
    be influenced by pH, tractable larval exposure
    experiments would allow for validation

8
Fishes
  • Primary uncertainty regarding indirect effects
    via habitat and prey
  • Targeted exposure experiments for model prey to
    assess the appropriate degree of concern
  • Molluscs and urchins primary prey of hogfish

9
Misc. organisms
  • Halimeda tuna
  • Promising lab (and possibly field) rat
  • Common local reef species
  • Extensive baseline physiological characterization
    in the literature (Conch reef)
  • Possible targeted field monitoring parameter at
    instrumented sites (e.g., Molasses reef)
  • Benthic Forams (symbiotic vs. aposymbiotic spp)
  • Small crustaceans and/or urchins (amphipods,
    other important fish prey)

10
Local deep corals
  • Lab exposure treatments theoretically feasible if
    material available
  • Oculina varicosa (Oculina Banks)
  • Lophelia pertusa

11
Concerns
  • Coral Health/Disease
  • Pink Line Syndrome of Porites lutea (Ravindran
    Raghukumar 2006)
  • Toxicity changes of metals (Cu, Hg) or other
    xenobiotic substances?
  • Amplification in apex fish and mammals?
  • Further detriment to coral health?
  • Good physiology needs to be incorporated
  • Different groups of organisms (e.g., corals vs.
    gastropods) may show inhibition of calcification,
    but by totally different mechanisms . . . .
    .implications for extrapolation to
    ecosystem-level effects

difficulty absorbing carbonate versus
difficulty excreting protons
12
SEFSC overview
  • Likely to proceed
  • Coral settlement assays on acid-conditioned tiles
    (Kuffner et al. 08)
  • Aug-Sept 2008
  • Straightforward but requiring basic resources
  • Broadcasting coral larval exposure treatments
  • Pre-settlement
  • Post-settlement growth
  • Fish larval exposure
  • Growth
  • Otolith validation
  • Halimeda tuna
  • Lab exposure
  • Field monitoring
  • Requiring more extensive development/ resources
  • Prey species exposures
  • Deep coral exposures
  • More extensive targeted field monitoring
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com