The cost of brooding in an estuary: Implications of declining salinity for gastropod females and their brooded embryos

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Abstract

Females of the gastropod Crepipatella dilatata brood their egg capsules in the pallial cavity under the shell for several weeks until the offspring hatch as juveniles-but at what cost? In estuaries, brooding females clamp tightly to the substrate during periods of low salinity (<22 psu), isolating the pallial cavity from the outside environment and potentially limiting the availability of oxygen to developing embryos, as well as to themselves. In this study, non-brooding females maintained normoxic levels in the pallial cavity even after about 30 h of isolation from the surrounding environment, while brooding females showed levels of severe hypoxia in the pallial fluid in as little as 3 h. This oxygen restriction activated an anaerobic pathway identified through L-lactate production both in the female foot and the embryonic tissue. By 72 h, L-lactate levels had increased approximately 122% in both brooding and non-brooding females, and L-lactate concentrations in advanced embryos near to hatching had increased by approximately 200%. However, over time the concentration of lactate did not increase in early embryos. Moreover, prolonged isolation from the surrounding seawater produced a measureable 'oxygen debt' in brooding females, non-brooding females, and encapsulated embryos, with the debt being greater for brooding than non-brooding females. Thus, the isolation of the pallial cavity in response to low salinity surroundings generated a significant energy cost for females and their embryos, a cost that increased as embryonic development progressed.

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Segura, C. J., Pechenik, J. A., Montory, J. A., Navarro, J. M., Paschke, K. A., Cubillos, V. M., & Chaparro, O. R. (2016). The cost of brooding in an estuary: Implications of declining salinity for gastropod females and their brooded embryos. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 543, 187–199. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps11593

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