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Food Supply and Seawater pCO2 Impact Calcification and Internal Shell Dissolution in the Blue Mussel Mytilus edulis

  • Frank Melzner ,

    fmelzner@ifm-geomar.de

    Affiliation Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany

  • Paul Stange,

    Affiliation Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany

  • Katja Trübenbach,

    Affiliations Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany, Laboratorio Maritimo da Guia, Faculdade de Ciencias da Universidade de Lisboa, Cascais, Portugal

  • Jörn Thomsen,

    Affiliation Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany

  • Isabel Casties,

    Affiliation Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany

  • Ulrike Panknin,

    Affiliation Biological Oceanography, Leibniz-Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), Kiel, Germany

  • Stanislav N. Gorb,

    Affiliation Institute of Zoology, Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel, Germany

  • Magdalena A. Gutowska

    Affiliation Institute of Physiology, Christian-Albrechts-University, Kiel, Germany

Abstract

Progressive ocean acidification due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions will alter marine ecosytem processes. Calcifying organisms might be particularly vulnerable to these alterations in the speciation of the marine carbonate system. While previous research efforts have mainly focused on external dissolution of shells in seawater under saturated with respect to calcium carbonate, the internal shell interface might be more vulnerable to acidification. In the case of the blue mussel Mytilus edulis, high body fluid pCO2 causes low pH and low carbonate concentrations in the extrapallial fluid, which is in direct contact with the inner shell surface. In order to test whether elevated seawater pCO2 impacts calcification and inner shell surface integrity we exposed Baltic M. edulis to four different seawater pCO2 (39, 142, 240, 405 Pa) and two food algae (310–350 cells mL−1 vs. 1600–2000 cells mL−1) concentrations for a period of seven weeks during winter (5°C). We found that low food algae concentrations and high pCO2 values each significantly decreased shell length growth. Internal shell surface corrosion of nacreous ( = aragonite) layers was documented via stereomicroscopy and SEM at the two highest pCO2 treatments in the high food group, while it was found in all treatments in the low food group. Both factors, food and pCO2, significantly influenced the magnitude of inner shell surface dissolution. Our findings illustrate for the first time that integrity of inner shell surfaces is tightly coupled to the animals' energy budget under conditions of CO2 stress. It is likely that under food limited conditions, energy is allocated to more vital processes (e.g. somatic mass maintenance) instead of shell conservation. It is evident from our results that mussels exert significant biological control over the structural integrity of their inner shell surfaces.

Introduction

Progressive ocean acidification due to anthropogenic CO2 emissions will impact marine ecosytems [1][4]. Calcifying organisms may be particularly vulnerable to ocean acidification, as elevated seawater pCO2 shifts the carbonate system speciation towards a decreased concentration of carbonate ions. This leads to a reduced CaCO3 saturation state for aragonite and calcite (Ωarag or Ωcalc), which can negatively impact calcification rates in several marine heterotrophic taxa [2], [3]. Bivalve molluscs, particularly their early life stages, can react with decreased rates of growth and calcification, as well as decreased shell strength towards elevated seawater pCO2 [5][9]. Changes in growth and calcification performance encountered in bivalve molluscs most likely are related to an altered energy budget allocation, with more energy potentially being consumed by homeostatic processes [10], [11]. Exoskeleton dissolution can be observed in some gastropod and bivalve mollusk species when Ω drops ≪1 [12][14]. Species vulnerability to external shell dissolution is probably strongly related to the presence or absence of a protective organic cover on the external shell side [15], [16] and, potentially, the protein and carbohydrate organic matrix that surrounds CaCO3 crystals within the shell [17][19]. While Ω<1 is rare in the contemporary global surface ocean [20], low Ω is a common feature of temperate coastal habitats, where seasonal hypoxia goes along with dissolved inorganic carbon production. Wind driven upwelling can then bring CO2 enriched waters in contact with shallow water habitats [15], [21]. We have recently measured very high and fluctuating summer seawater pCO2 (>100 Pa, >1000 µatm, Ωarag≪1) in habitats in the Western Baltic that are dominated by the blue mussel Mytilus edulis. We could also demonstrate that mussels from this population can calcify at high rates even when Ωarag<0.5 when food supply is abundant [10], [15]. While high calcification rates in seawater under saturated with CaCO3 already seem remarkable, it needs to be emphasized that the extracellular environment at the inner shell interface is even less favorable for biomineralization: as all heterotrophic marine ectothermic animals maintain pCO2 values in their extracellular fluids (i.e. hemolymph, extrapallial fluid) between 100–400 Pa (ca. 1000–4000 µatm) in order to drive diffusive excretion of metabolic CO2 [22], the extracellular carbonate system is shifted further towards decreased [CO32−]. While it cannot be excluded that the precise site of incipient biomineralization is occluded by an organic matrix sheath or gel to create a microenvironment that is characterized by higher Ωarag [19], [23], [24], inner shell regions that are not actively being expanded are in contact with an extracellular fluid that is most likely highly corrosive (low pH and [CO32−], high pCO2). Some protection from dissolution may be provided by the chitin and protein layer that covers the uppermost (mantle facing) nacre [18]. During exposure to high seawater pCO2, the extracellular carbonate system shifts to even lower carbonate concentrations, as M. edulis and other bivalves do not perform an extracellular pH (pHe) compensatory reaction [11], [15]. While these results indicate strong biological control over the biomineralization process in mussels, they also suggest that a continuous energetic effort may be necessary to maintain inner shell integrity. It has been previously shown that during stress (e.g. aerial exposure, environmental anoxia), the inner shell surface is corroded in several bivalve species due to proton generation through anaerobic production of succinate [25], [26]. While this may be adaptive, as CaCO3 helps to buffer the developing acidosis, it also indicates that the inner shell might be more endangered by elevated seawater pCO2 than the outer shell surface, which is covered by a chemically resistant periostracum [27]. The situation may be different in those calcifiers (e.g. cephalopods, teleost fish, decapod crustaceans) that actively modulate the extracellular carbonate system speciation in order to stabilize pHe: these organisms accumulate [HCO3]e significantly above seawater levels (ca. 2 mM). This leads to high calcium carbonate saturation states and could be one reason for the observed occurrence of increased rates of calcification or ‘hypercalcified’ skeletal structures [3], [28][30].

We predict that when elevated seawater pCO2 (hypercapnia) is coupled with food limitation, the inner shell front may be the area of the bivalve shell that is most endangered to suffer from partial dissolution or corrosion. Recent studies indicate that CO2 effects on biomineralization in several marine heterotrophic calcifiers that are weak acid-base regulators are primarily due to altered priorities in energy budget allocation [10], [31], [32]. However, studies that tested the influence of altered energy supply on energy budget decisions during CO2 stress are lacking to date. To systematically address this research question, we performed a seven – week long experiment in which we monitored the effects of food algae concentration (2 levels) and pCO2 (4 levels) on M. edulis shell growth and shell integrity. Following the experiment, we investigated inner shell surfaces using stereo microscopic and SEM techniques.

Materials and Methods

Animals and experimental incubation

Mussels were collected on 2010-02-22 from a subtidal population in Kiel Fjord (54°19.8′N; 10°9.0′E) and directly transferred to the experimental aquaria. We consider Kiel Fjord blue mussels M. edulis, although introgression of M. trossulus alleles has recently been observed for some nuclear markers in our experimental population [33]. Once in the experimental aquaria, pCO2 was adjusted within 5 hours to the target values. The experiment lasted from 2010-02-22 until 2010-04-08. Each aquarium contained 4 experimental animals (see Table 1 for details). Experimental design was essentially identical to that presented in Thomsen & Melzner [10], except that in this experiment we used 32 aquaria, of which 16 were assigned to the high food density group (HF) and 16 to the low food density group (LF). Each 4 experimental aquarium units were continuously equilibrated at each food level with pre-mixed gases containing 390 ppmv, 1120 ppmv, 2400 ppmv, 4000 ppmv CO2 using a central automatic CO2 mixing-facility (Linde Gas & HTK Hamburg, Germany). The CO2 treatment levels were chosen to represent conditions that can be expected to seasonally occur in Kiel Fjord within the next 100 years (see [15] for rationale). Experimental aquaria (ca 18 liters each) were continuously perfused with (50, 20, 5 µm) filtered and UV treated seawater from the fjord at a rate of 50 mL min−1 via gravity feed from two header tanks. Flow rates to the experimental aquaria were checked and adjusted daily. Food algae (Rhodomonas sp.) were cultured as previously described [15] and supplemented continuously to the 16 HF tanks to maintain a cell density of 1600–2000 cells mL−1 in the experimental units (see Table 1 for details). The 16 LF tanks received no additional food in addition to what passed though the filters and cell density was maintained at 310–350 cells mL−1 (see Table 1). Food algae density was measured on four occasions during the experimental incubation using a Coulter counter (cells between 4–10 µm diameter). Salinity, temperature and pH (NBS scale) were measured daily using a WTW 340i pH-meter and a WTW SenTix 81-electrode which was calibrated with Radiometer IUPAC precision pH buffer 7 and 10 (S11M44, S11 M007), the light∶dark cycle was adjusted to 12∶12 hours. Carbonate chemistry of the seawater was determined twice during the experimental period (week 2, week 7) from pHNBS and by measuring total dissolved inorganic carbon (CT) using an AIRICA autoanalyzer (Marianda GmbH, Kiel, Germany) with a precision of 2–4 µmol kg−1 seawater. Accuracy of CT measurements was ensured by using Certified Reference Material provided by Andrew Dickson of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (http://andrew.ucsd.edu/co2qc/). Seawater carbonate system parameters (Ω, pCO2) were calculated using the CO2SYS program [34]. The carbonate system speciation (pCO2, Ωcalc and Ωarag) was calculated from pH and alkalinity using CO2SYS ([22], Table 1) with dissociation constants from Roy et al. [35].

Mussels were sacrificed after an incubation time of 7 weeks. Shell length was determined using a caliper (precision 0.1 mm). Mussels were carefully opened with a scalpel and the soft body was dissected without injury of the inner shell layers. Somatic tissue was dried at 80°C for 24 h and weighed on a precision scale (Sartorius TE64, Sartorius AG, Germany). Shell dry mass was determined following 24 h of drying at 60°C. Shell length growth was directly obtained from initial and final length measurements, while shell mass growth and somatic growth were estimated from the difference between final measurements and estimates of initial shell- and somatic mass, obtained using a shell length vs. somatic mass and a shell length vs. shell mass relationships from a subsample of mussels (N = 10 mussels, shell length range: 13–23 mm) sampled on 2010-02-22 from the pool of animals intended for this experiment:(1)where SM = shell mass in mg, SL = shell length in mm, R2 = 0.98, p<0.01.(2)where SDM = somatic dry mass in mg, SL = shell length in mm, R2 = 0.95, p<0.01.

Shell analysis

One valve from each experimental mussel (i.e. 4 shells per replicate aquarium) was analyzed under the stereomicroscope (Wild Heerbrugg, Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) at 8–40× magnification and images were taken using a digital camera (ProgRes CF, Jenoptik, Jena, Germany) and ProgRes Picture Pro 2.7 software (Jenoptik) at 10× magnification. Most shells from the higher pCO2 treatments were characterized by partial corrosion of the nacre, the innermost shell layer. Corroded regions lose the typical glossy appearance of nacre and appear white when viewed under a light source (see Fig. 2a). We thus were able to distinguish between corroded parts of the shell and intact regions using the freeware ImageJ Version 1.43 (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/) based on differences in grey scale. Grey scale thresholds were adjusted for each valve based on grey scale intensity differences of visually confirmed corroded vs. uncorroded areas of the particular shell image (uncorroded nacre reflects visible light). Corroded areas were marked and set in relation to the total inner surface area of the valve:(3)where DA(%) = dissolved nacre area in % of the total inner shell area, SA = inner shell area, i.e. all pixels enclosed by the shell circumference, CA = corroded area, i.e. nacre pixels above a set grey scale threshold. The curvature of the shell was ignored for area calculations. All shells were similar in phenotype; total shell growth (1–3 mm) during the experimental incubation was small enough relative to shell length at the end of the experiment (18–21 mm) in order to neglect potential differences in shell curvature between treatments.

SEM images were generated from select shells to confirm our classification into control and corroded nacre regions. Valves were broken along defined trajectories and 2 cm long shell fractions were mounted on SEM pedestal stubs. Sections were coated with gold-palladium and examined using scanning electron microscopes (Nanolab 7, Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany and Hitachi S4800, Hitachi High - Technologies Europe, Krefeld, Germany).

Viscosity and filtration calculations

Seawater kinematic viscosity (ν, 10−6 m2 s−1) was calculated for experimental conditions (mean temperature and salinity) for this and two previous experiments [10], [15]. Viscosity in relation to temperature was calculated (>10°C) and extrapolated (<10°C) from values published by El-Dessouky and Ettouny [36]. Filtration rates (FR) of 9.6 ml min−1 were calculated for a standard mussel of 18 mm shell length and 29.1 mg dry mass at 15°C and a corresponding viscosity of 1.15 10−6 m2 s−1 according to Riisgård and Møhlenberg [37]. The obtained rate resembles FR for mussel sizes used in our experiments. Riisgård and Larsen [38] described a linear decrease of FR with increasing viscosity. Assuming a decrease of 10% per 0.1 10−6 m2 s−1 viscosity increase (calculated from experimental data in [38] and references therein), FR was recalculated for the mean viscosity in the experimental aquaria.

Statistics

Measurements from the four mussels of each replicate aquarium were averaged. Two-factorial ANOVA was used to analyze shell length, mass growth, somatic mass growth and internal shell corrosion in response to food supply (2 levels, 4 replicate aquaria each) and seawater pCO2 (4 levels, 4 replicate aquaria each) using Statistica 8. Relative quantities (i.e. % shell corrosion area) were arcsine transformed prior to statistical analysis.

Results

Following seven weeks of acclimation to 2 food and 4 CO2 treatment levels, experimental animals were sampled. Shell length growth was significantly reduced by low algae cell density and by high seawater pCO2, with no significant interaction between factors (Fig. 1, Table 1, 2). With respect to controls at each food level, shell length growth was significantly reduced in the highest pCO2 treatment (405 Pa, p<0.001). Shell mass growth and somatic growth were significantly reduced in the LF treatment (Table 2). However, no significant differences in shell mass and somatic growth were found with respect to seawater pCO2. It needs to be mentioned that absolute rates of growth were low in this experiment in comparison to previous experiments at higher temperatures (see Table 3). While shell length growth was based on direct initial and final measurements, initial shell and somatic mass were interpolated (see Methods). Owing to large variability of shell length vs. shell mass relationships (see e.g. [15]), shell and somatic growth rates estimated in this experiment should be viewed with caution.

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Figure 1. Shell length growth (A) and internal shell surface dissolution (B) vs. seawater pCO2.

(A) Shell length growth during the seven week growth trial. (B) Internal shell surface dissolution in % of total inner shell area; low food (LF, white) and high food (HF, black) groups, means and SEM. A seawater pCO2 of 100 Pa = 987 µatm.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.g001

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Table 2. Two - factorial ANOVA results. Significant results in bold.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.t002

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Table 3. Comparison of control pCO2 treatments of M. edulis growth trials conducted in our laboratory.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.t003

Kinematic viscosity was ca. 30% higher at the low temperatures in this experiment than in our summer experiment (Table 3), this should have decreased filtration rates and food intake of the experimental mussels by 35%. This could partially explain lower shell growth rates observed in the present experiment under HF conditions: shell length growth during 8 week growth trials at warmer temperatures [10], [15] vs. that observed in the present 7 week growth trial was more than a factor three higher (Table 3).

Internal shell corrosion was visible in HF mussels only at the two highest CO2 treatment levels, while in the LF treatment, inner shell corrosion was observed in all four treatments (Fig. 2). The white color of corroded shell surfaces resulted from dissolution of nacre tablets and the resulting changes in light refraction due to the remaining organic material (Fig. 2). Shell cross sections illustrated that a visible dissolution zone extended ca. 3–5 µm into the nacreous layer (N = 6 shells studied, Fig. 3). Below the thin dissolution zone, nacre tablet layers appeared to be intact (Fig. 3b, c). The extent of inner shell surface corrosion was significantly influenced by both, pCO2 and food density (Fig. 1, Table 2). At the highest pCO2, all LF mussels were heavily corroded, with >30% of total inner shell area being affected.

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Figure 2. Internal shell dissolution of the nacreous layer.

(A) left: stereo microscopic image of the inner shell surface of a control (39 Pa, HF) mussel, middle: schematic drawing of the inner shell surface area of the same control shell to indicate extent of the nacreous layer, right: inner shell surface of a high pCO2 (405 Pa, LF) mussel. White areas correspond to corroded nacreous surface layers, darker areas to unimpacted nacreous surfaces. (B) SEM image of a severely corroded nacre surface corresponding to position (B) in Fig. 2A. (C) SEM image of control nacre surfaces, illustrating coordinated aragonite tablet growth (3 layers visible).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.g002

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Figure 3. SEM images of shell cross sections of uncorroded (A) vs. corroded (B, C) nacreous tablet layers.

(A) cross section through uncorroded nacreous layer with growing nacre tablets on the surface. (B, C) cross sections through dissolved nacreous layers, illustrating extensive dissolution of plates ca. 3–5 µm deep into the nacreous layer. Deeper nacreous layers appear to be macroscopically unaffected. Corroded cross sections were obtained from the same mussel piece shown in Fig. 4A and B. The white dashed lines in A, B indicate the breaking edge, NS = nacreous layer surface, NC = nacreous layer cross section.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.g003

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Figure 4. Stereo microscopic (A) and SEM (B,C) images of shell sections with organic covered spots on otherwise dissolved nacreous surfaces.

(A) cross section through a shell piece with corroded nacre surface (white) and organic covered spots (blue), see Fig. 3 for larger SEM magnification of the upper part of the shell cross section. (B) SEM image of the same shell piece displayed in (A), illustrating nacreous and prismatic layers, as well as an amorphous structure on the location of the blue spot (S) which presumably is transparent and organic, as the characteristic light refraction pattern of the underlying nacreous layer is conserved in ‘spot’ areas, see (A). (C) SEM image from strongly corroded shell area, with blue spot elevated several µm above the surface. This shell region also appears to be covered with protective organic material.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0024223.g004

Circular blue spots on the dissolved nacre surface appeared to be characteristic for heavily corroded shells (Fig. 4a). SEM revealed that these spots correspond to nacre regions that are covered by (transparent) organic material, which seems to protect the underlying nacre and its characteristic light refraction patterns (Fig. 4b,c). Fig. 4c illustrates an extreme case, where such a circular, organic covered spot extends several µm above the otherwise corroded nacre surface. Using SEM, multiple of such organic covered spots of 10–100 µm diameter could be demonstrated on N = 6 heavily corroded shells.

Discussion

We acclimated blue mussels to four different seawater pCO2 values and two food concentrations at low temperatures and found effects of both factors on shell length growth. In addition, we were able to demonstrate internal shell corrosion in bivalves as a consequence of high seawater pCO2. We also found that internal shell corrosion is highly dependent on food concentration. Our results demonstrate the high degree of control that bivalves can exert over the structural integrity of the inner shell surface and suggest that shell corrosion is related to energy budget reallocations.

Shell and somatic growth

While there was positive shell and somatic growth in all experimental groups during the experimental period, shell length and mass growth as well as somatic growth rates were lower than rates observed in previous summer and autumn experiments using experimental animals of comparative size from the same mussel population (Table 3) [10], [15]. While food supply was abundant in all three experiments, temperature was significantly lower (ca. 5°C) in the present experiment (Table 3). Temperature influences key processes that can impair growth and calcification in mytilid bivalves: (i) temperature induced reductions in metabolic rates are not fully compensated for by thermal acclimation of key physiological functions in mussels (e.g. cardiovascular function, [39]). In addition, (ii) seawater kinematic viscosity is strongly temperature dependent and was much higher in this experiment (by ca. 27%) than in the summer experiment (Table 3). Viscosity impacts mussel energy budgets as the lateral gill cilia that generate the feeding current are mechanically limited when working under conditions of high viscosity: Riisgård & Larsen [38] could demonstrate that temperature induced reductions in M. edulis filtration rate are exclusively due to increases in viscosity that go along with low temperature. We estimate that the mussels in this experiment filtered, on average, 34% less water than those in our summer experiment (Table 3) [15] As food retention of particles >4 µm is almost 100% [40], reduced filtration equates to reduced energy intake. Finally, (iii) CO2 solubility is higher in cold waters and CaCO3 saturation states are lower (see Table 1), which led to low Ωarag<1 in all treatments in the present experiment. This might also increase costs for calcification and shell maintenance. Low rates of shell length growth of <0.5 mm week−1 in winter animals (vs. >1 mm week−1 in summer) have also been detected in situ in Kiel Fjord mussels (see Fig. 2 in [15]). Food concentrations utilized in our experiments approximately correspond to Chl a values that can be expected in Kiel Fjord: assuming a Chl a content of 1–2 pg cell−1 Rhodomonas sp. [41], the HF treatment contained ca. 2–4 µg Chl a L−1 while the LF treatment contained 0.3–0.7 µg Chl a L−1. Kiel Fjord Chl a concentrations can be >10 µg L−1 during August and are typically below 1 µg L−1 in the winter months [42].

Shell length growth was significantly reduced in LF treatments and by high seawater pCO2, effects of both factors were more or less additive. No significant CO2 effects could be found with regard to shell mass and somatic mass growth, while food supply had a strong effect on both parameters. Variability of shell and somatic mass growth rate was high (Table 2, see methods), this might have potentially obscured more subtle CO2 effects. Similarly, other studies that recorded little total net shell and somatic growth also were unable to detect significant effects of pCO2 on calcification performance in juvenile/adult mytilid mussels at seawater pCO2 up to 300–500 Pa [3], [43]. Under elevated feeding conditions and at higher temperatures >9°C, strong reductions in shell length and mass accretion of >30% were found at high seawater pCO2 of >400–500 Pa, in both, brackish and fully marine mytilid populations [10], [15], [44].

Internal shell dissolution

It has long been recognized that the inner bivalve shell surface is plastic and prone to dissolution. Dugal [45] was among the first to measure internal CaCO3 dissolution during emersion in the bivalve Mercenaria mercenaria, other studies followed by demonstrating that 45Ca that is incorporated into the shell appears in the extrapallial fluid during emersion [25], [46]. Akberali et al. [47] studied SEM images of inner shell surfaces of freshly exposed intertidal bivalves (Scrobicularia plana) and could demonstrate visible changes in the structural integrity of the inner shell layers during a single low tide event, leading the authors to conclude that dissolution and re-calcification are cyclic events on a daily basis. Further, these authors could also demonstrate that during abrupt 3 week - long exposure to dilute seawater (20%), shell mass decreased by 10% due to valve closure and subsequent internal dissolution. While Crenshaw & Neff [25] suggested that shell dissolution is primarily due to acidification caused by accumulation of the anaerobic endproduct succinate, Jokumsen & Fyhn [48] measured increases in extracellular [Ca2+] during aerial exposure in M. edulis, but also increases in extracellular pCO2, which they attributed to frequent brief valve opening to enhance residual aerobic metabolism. Thus, CO2 induced corrosion of the inner shell surface might be a common feature of mytilid physiology that is adaptive to life in intertidal habitats.

Long – term exposure to elevated pCO2 in our experiment induced shell corrosion of aragonite platelets that form the nacreous inner layer of the shell (Figure 2, 3, 4). This effect was more pronounced when mussels were food limited. It has been shown that bivalves do not control pHe in haemolymph and extrapallial fluid [15], [49]. Increases in seawater pCO2 lead to equivalent increases in extrapallial fluid and haemolymph pCO2 in order to maintain diffusion gradients to excrete metabolic CO2 (see [22] for a discussion). High pCO2 values of extracellular fluids constrain the carbonate system towards CO32− concentrations that are even lower than in the surrounding seawater (see Table 2), causing extremely low Ωarag and low pH, thus progressively more corrosive conditions at the mantle shell interface. It is therefore likely that maintenance of inner shell integrity requires continuous energy investment. The strong effects of food availability and pCO2 (Table 2) point in this direction. Increased effort for inner shell maintenance might explain part of the surplus metabolism observed in bivalves exposed to elevated seawater pCO2 [5], [10], [11]. In highly corroded shells we also found regions that appeared to be covered with organic material (Fig. 3, 4). While these structures deserve further research attention with regards to their composition, it is intriguing to speculate that M. edulis may need to invest additional energy into synthesizing organic material in order to stabilize sites of dissolution. This is particularly relevant, as it has been suggested by Palmer [50] that the main costs of shell formation are those for organic matrix (i.e. the energetic value of the organic fraction within the shell and the biosynthesis costs for this material), with 29 J mg−1 shell in comparison to only 1–2 J mg−1 shell for CaCO3 deposition. Based on these results, an increase in the organic fraction of a shell from e.g. 1.5 to 5% would increase the relative costs for the organic fraction from 22% to almost 50% of shell formation costs (c.f. [50]). Thus, repair and protective mechanisms based on organic coatings might have a strong impact on the energy budget of mussels with corroded inner shell surfaces. Whether inner shell repair and maintenance is provided by the mantle tissue, or whether circulating hemocytes are involved in material deposition at sites of repair is also unclear at present [51][54]. We have not found indications (on a stereomicroscopic level, i.e 40× magnification) for internal shell corrosion in our previous experiments at higher temperatures and high densities of food algae [10], [15], although thickness of aragonite platelets in shell cross - sections was reduced in the summer experiment [15].

While external shell dissolution in high pCO2 waters has been described for several marine ectothermic animals with heavily calcified exoskeletons e.g. [12][15], [55], internal shell dissolution has, to our knowledge, only been documented in one other study: Clark et al. [56], using SEM, reported pitting of the spicules of echinoplutei when raised at a pCO2 of ca. 130 Pa. The larval skeleton of echinoid larvae is secreted by a primary mesenchyme cell syncitium and is thought to be in contact with the surrounding extracellular (coelomic) fluid [57], [58]. Assuming that pluteus larvae are as weak acid-base regulators as adult echinoids studied so far [59] it is likely that larval spicules are also in contact with extracellular fluids highly undersaturated with regard to calcium carbonate. It is unknown, whether spicule corrosion in pluteus larvae observed by Clark et al. [56] was related to food supply. This option should be investigated in future studies on echinoderm early life stages.

Conclusion

We conclude that internal shell dissolution in the bivalve M. edulis from the Baltic Sea is tightly coupled to the energy budget: effects of food algae density in the treatment aquaria have a strong impact on inner shell integrity. These results demonstrate that maintenance of an intact nacre surface in an extrapallial fluid that is corrosive (even under control conditions, see [15]) requires energy input. We hypothesize that during strong pCO2 stress coupled to food limitation typical for the winter months, M. edulis might allocate resources towards conservation of somatic mass, thereby partially sacrificing nacre, thus utilizing an evolutionarily conserved plastic mechanism originating from the extreme requirements of life in an intertidal habitat. Our results also indicate that it is extremely difficult to infer rates of shell dissolution from empty shells subjected to corrosive seawater (e.g. [60]) to constrain calcification budgets (i.e. net vs. gross calcification), as there is great biological control over inner shell surface integrity. Elucidation of the fraction of the energy budget that is devoted to inner shell maintenance mechanisms under adverse carbonate system speciation states awaits investigation.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: FM MAG PS. Performed the experiments: FM MAG PS JT KT IC SNG UP. Analyzed the data: FM MAG PS JT KT IC SNG. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: FM SNG MAG. Wrote the paper: FM MAG JT.

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