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OAS accession Detail for 0172041
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accessions_id: 0172041 | archive
Title: The impacts of ocean acidification and multiple estuarine stressors on early-life stage of bivalve shellfish from a laboratory experiment study (NCEI Accession 0172041)
Abstract: This dataset contains results (e.g., mean survival, growth, and developmental rate etc.) from laboratory-based trials involving early-life stage (larval and juvenile) bivalve shellfish exposed to: 1) diurnal fluctuations in carbonate chemistry and dissolved oxygen; (2) chronic exposures to multiple, estuarine stressors (e.g., low pH, low DO, and thermal stress); and (3) transgenerational acidification. Results from diurnal experiments indicated that exposure to ideal conditions (e.g., pH = 7.9; DO > 7 mg/L) during the daytime did not offset the harmful impacts of acidification and hypoxia experienced by both larval- and juvenile-staged bivalve shellfish during non-daylight hours. In addition, laboratory studies involving chronic (i.e., sustained conditions) exposures to several estuarine stressors revealed that the combined and interactive impacts of multiple, co-occurring stressors can be more detrimental than singular exposures to individual stressors, outcomes that cannot be predicted based upon laboratory investigations using individual, separate exposures. Finally, unlike previous studies with other bivalve species, parental exposure environmentally relevant levels of coastal acidification does not mitigate the harmful effects manifested among next-generation offspring exposed to similar levels of acidification and, in fact, rendered offspring more sensitive to low pH and multiple, additional stressors.
Date received: 20180402
Start date: 20120901
End date: 20161030
Seanames:
West boundary: -97.286
East boundary: -61.12
North boundary: 48.421
South boundary: 24.583
Observation types:
Instrument types:
Datatypes:
Submitter: Griffith, Andrew W.
Submitting institution: State University of New York at Stony Brook
Collecting institutions:
Contributing projects:
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Number of observations:
Supplementary information: The bivalves for this study were collected from Shinnecock Bay, NY (40.865N, 72.472W), but are found in coastal zones with the North American continent ranging from the Gulf of St. Lawrence (e.g., 48.421N, 61.120W) to the Florida Keys (e.g., 24.583N, 81.428W) and westward to the the Texas Coast (e.g., 27.788N, 97.286W).
Availability date:
Metadata version: 19
Keydate: 2018-04-02 13:37:07+00
Editdate: 2022-03-29 13:18:23+00