TY - DATA ID - parker2012scca T1 - Seawater carbonate chemistry and survival, development, shell length of larvae and standard metabolic rate of adults of the Sydney rock oyster, Saccostrea glomerata AU - Parker, Laura M AU - Ross, Pauline M AU - O'Connor, Wayne A AU - Borysko, Larissa AU - Raftos, David A AU - Pörtner, Hans-Otto PY - 2012 PB - PANGAEA DO - 10.1594/PANGAEA.943117 UR - https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.943117 N2 - It is essential to predict the impact of elevated PCO2 on marine organisms and habitats to anticipate the severity and consequences of future ocean chemistry change. Despite the importance of carry-over effects in the evolutionary history of marine organisms, few studies have considered links between life-history stages when determining how marine organisms will respond to elevated PCO2, and none have considered the link between adults and their offspring. Herein, we exposed adults of wild and selectively bred Sydney rock oysters, Saccostrea glomerata to elevated PCO2 during reproductive conditioning and measured the development, growth and survival response of their larvae. We found that elevated PCO2 had a negative impact on larvae of S. glomerata causing a reduction in growth, rate of development and survival. Exposing adults to elevated PCO2 during reproductive conditioning, however, had positive carry-over effects on larvae. Larvae spawned from adults exposed to elevated PCO2 were larger and developed faster, but displayed similar survival compared with larvae spawned from adults exposed to ambient PCO2. Furthermore, selectively bred larvae of S. glomerata were more resilient to elevated PCO2 than wild larvae. Measurement of the standard metabolic rate (SMR) of adult S. glomerata showed that at ambient PCO2, SMR is increased in selectively bred compared with wild oysters and is further increased during exposure to elevated PCO2. This study suggests that sensitive marine organisms may have the capacity to acclimate or adapt to elevated PCO2 over the next century and a change in energy turnover indicated by SMR may be a key process involved. KW - Animalia KW - Benthic animals KW - Benthos KW - Brackish waters KW - Containers and aquaria (20-1000 L or < 1 m**2) KW - Development KW - Growth/Morphology KW - Laboratory experiment KW - Mollusca KW - Mortality/Survival KW - Pelagos KW - Respiration KW - Saccostrea glomerata KW - Single species KW - South Pacific KW - Temperate KW - Zooplankton ER -