Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change

The massive die-off of the long-spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum, a significant reef grazer, in the mid 1980s was followed by phase shifts from coral dominated to macroalgae dominated reefs in the Caribbean. While Diadema populations have recovered in some reefs with concomitant increases in co...

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Main Author: Elizabeth Sherman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2015-06-01
Series:PeerJ
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Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/1006.pdf
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author Elizabeth Sherman
author_facet Elizabeth Sherman
author_sort Elizabeth Sherman
collection DOAJ
description The massive die-off of the long-spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum, a significant reef grazer, in the mid 1980s was followed by phase shifts from coral dominated to macroalgae dominated reefs in the Caribbean. While Diadema populations have recovered in some reefs with concomitant increases in coral cover, the additional threat of increasing temperatures due to global climate change has not been investigated in adult sea urchins. In this study, I measured acute thermal tolerance of D. antillarum and that of a sympatric sea urchin not associated with coral cover, Echinometra lucunter, over winter, spring, and summer, thus exposing them to substantial natural thermal variation. Animals were taken from the wild and placed in laboratory tanks in room temperature water (∼22 °C) that was then heated at 0.16–0.3 °C min−1 and the righting behavior of individual sea urchins was recorded. I measured both the temperature at which the animal could no longer right itself (TLoR) and the righting time at temperatures below the TLoR. In all seasons, D. antillarum exhibited a higher mean TLoR than E. lucunter. The mean TLoR of each species increased with increasing environmental temperature revealing that both species acclimatize to seasonal changes in temperatures. The righting times of D. antillarum were much shorter than those of E. lucunter. The longer relative spine length of Diadema compared to that of Echinometra may contribute to their shorter righting times, but does not explain their higher TLoR. The thermal safety margin (the difference between the mean collection temperature and the mean TLoR) was between 3.07–3.66 °C for Echinometra and 3.79–5.67 °C for Diadema. While these thermal safety margins exceed present day temperatures, they are modest compared to those of temperate marine invertebrates. If sea temperatures increase more rapidly than can be accommodated by the sea urchins (either by genetic adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, or both), this will have important consequences for the structure of coral reefs.
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spelling doaj.art-eea138d64c91443c8e5c2b8ff84d69692023-12-03T00:48:56ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592015-06-013e100610.7717/peerj.10061006Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate changeElizabeth Sherman0Department of Natural Sciences, Bennington College, Bennington, VT, USAThe massive die-off of the long-spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum, a significant reef grazer, in the mid 1980s was followed by phase shifts from coral dominated to macroalgae dominated reefs in the Caribbean. While Diadema populations have recovered in some reefs with concomitant increases in coral cover, the additional threat of increasing temperatures due to global climate change has not been investigated in adult sea urchins. In this study, I measured acute thermal tolerance of D. antillarum and that of a sympatric sea urchin not associated with coral cover, Echinometra lucunter, over winter, spring, and summer, thus exposing them to substantial natural thermal variation. Animals were taken from the wild and placed in laboratory tanks in room temperature water (∼22 °C) that was then heated at 0.16–0.3 °C min−1 and the righting behavior of individual sea urchins was recorded. I measured both the temperature at which the animal could no longer right itself (TLoR) and the righting time at temperatures below the TLoR. In all seasons, D. antillarum exhibited a higher mean TLoR than E. lucunter. The mean TLoR of each species increased with increasing environmental temperature revealing that both species acclimatize to seasonal changes in temperatures. The righting times of D. antillarum were much shorter than those of E. lucunter. The longer relative spine length of Diadema compared to that of Echinometra may contribute to their shorter righting times, but does not explain their higher TLoR. The thermal safety margin (the difference between the mean collection temperature and the mean TLoR) was between 3.07–3.66 °C for Echinometra and 3.79–5.67 °C for Diadema. While these thermal safety margins exceed present day temperatures, they are modest compared to those of temperate marine invertebrates. If sea temperatures increase more rapidly than can be accommodated by the sea urchins (either by genetic adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, or both), this will have important consequences for the structure of coral reefs.https://peerj.com/articles/1006.pdfSea urchinsThermal toleranceCoral reefsGlobal climate change
spellingShingle Elizabeth Sherman
Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
PeerJ
Sea urchins
Thermal tolerance
Coral reefs
Global climate change
title Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
title_full Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
title_fullStr Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
title_full_unstemmed Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
title_short Can sea urchins beat the heat? Sea urchins, thermal tolerance and climate change
title_sort can sea urchins beat the heat sea urchins thermal tolerance and climate change
topic Sea urchins
Thermal tolerance
Coral reefs
Global climate change
url https://peerj.com/articles/1006.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethsherman canseaurchinsbeattheheatseaurchinsthermaltoleranceandclimatechange