Examining the relationship of biochemically-derived oyster larval food supply metrics with concurrent optically-derived seston properties in Mississippi Sound

IF 2.6 3区 地球科学 Q1 MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science Pub Date : 2024-09-11 DOI:10.1016/j.ecss.2024.108949
James C. Klein , Eric N. Powell , Xiaodong Zhang , Danielle A. Kreeger , Roger L. Thomas , Sara M. Pace
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Abstract

The capacity for oyster (Crassostrea virginica) larvae to successfully develop, grow, and survive is dependent on the quantity and quality of available food. Therefore, examining food supply based upon its biochemical composition of lipid, protein, and labile carbohydrate offers critical insight into oyster larval performance and settlement potential. Biochemical analyses, however, are time-intensive, requiring that such studies be retrospective, generating a need to investigate alternative, real-time techniques to characterize food supply, such as evaluating inherent optical properties. To better understand the food assemblage available to oyster larvae, water samples from seven oyster reefs in Mississippi Sound over two years (May through October) were analyzed for temperature, salinity, particulate organic matter, biochemical properties (lipid, protein, carbohydrate), and in situ optical properties used to infer plankton abundance by size class (pico-, nano-, microplankton), total chlorophyll content, and the magnitude of absorption for colored detrital material. A subset of observations, considered to reflect conditions facilitative for oyster larval survival, clustered into four statistically distinct groups characterized by: high-microplankton, low-microplankton, high-protein, and high-salinity. Total chlorophyll content changed with abiotic conditions, with relatively high concentrations during oligohaline and mesohaline regimes, but declined during periods of changing salinity. Further, transitioning salinities co-occurred with reductions in microplankton concentration and increases in picoplankton concentration. Results of a Spearman's rank analysis, principal components analysis, and stepwise linear regressions revealed that optical properties were not strongly associated with biochemical properties, preventing these optical data from providing an effective index of oyster larval food supply. Instead, optically-derived microplankton abundance recapitulated total chlorophyll, both of which poorly corresponded to biochemical properties. Picoplankton, colored detrital material, and particulate organic material all exhibited a similarly weak correspondence to biochemical food properties, corroborating that measurements of chlorophyll and particulates do not accurately reflect the food available to oyster larvae, and that biochemical metrics remain as superior food supply indicators.
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研究密西西比海湾生化牡蛎幼体食物供应指标与同时光学衍生的沉积物特性之间的关系
牡蛎(Crassostrea virginica)幼体成功发育、生长和存活的能力取决于可用食物的数量和质量。因此,根据食物中脂质、蛋白质和易变碳水化合物的生化成分来研究食物供应,对了解牡蛎幼体的表现和定居潜力至关重要。然而,生化分析需要大量时间,因此此类研究必须是回顾性的,这就需要研究其他实时技术来确定食物供应的特征,例如评估固有的光学特性。为了更好地了解牡蛎幼体可获得的食物组合,对密西西比海湾 7 个牡蛎礁两年内(5 月至 10 月)的水样进行了分析,包括温度、盐度、颗粒有机物、生化特性(脂质、蛋白质、碳水化合物)以及用于推断浮游生物丰度的原位光学特性(按大小分类(皮浮游生物、纳浮游生物、微浮游生物))、叶绿素总含量以及有色碎屑物质的吸收程度。观测数据子集被认为反映了有利于牡蛎幼虫生存的条件,在统计上分为四个不同的组别:高微浮游生物组、低微浮游生物组、高蛋白组和高盐度组。叶绿素总含量随着非生物条件的变化而变化,在低盐度和中盐度条件下,叶绿素总含量相对较高,但在盐度变化期间,叶绿素总含量有所下降。此外,盐度的变化还伴随着微浮游生物浓度的降低和微浮游生物浓度的增加。斯皮尔曼秩分析、主成分分析和逐步线性回归的结果表明,光学特性与生化特性的关联性不强,因此这些光学数据无法提供牡蛎幼虫食物供应的有效指标。相反,从光学角度得出的微浮游生物丰度再现了总叶绿素,而这两者与生化特性的对应性都很差。稚浮游生物、有色碎屑物质和微粒有机物质与生化食物特性的对应关系同样微弱,这证实了叶绿素和微粒的测量结果并不能准确反映牡蛎幼虫可获得的食物,生化指标仍然是食物供应的上佳指标。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
7.10%
发文量
374
审稿时长
9 months
期刊介绍: Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science is an international multidisciplinary journal devoted to the analysis of saline water phenomena ranging from the outer edge of the continental shelf to the upper limits of the tidal zone. The journal provides a unique forum, unifying the multidisciplinary approaches to the study of the oceanography of estuaries, coastal zones, and continental shelf seas. It features original research papers, review papers and short communications treating such disciplines as zoology, botany, geology, sedimentology, physical oceanography.
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