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Thermal stress affects bioturbators' burrowing behavior: A mesocosm experiment on common cockles (Cerastoderma edule)

Authors :
Zhou, Zhengquan
Bouma, Tjeerd J.
Fivash, Gregory S.
Ysebaert, Tom
van IJzerloo, Lennart
van Dalen, Jeroen
van Dam, Bas
Walles, Brenda
Proceskunde
ESL General Section
Van der Heide group
Proceskunde
ESL General Section
Source :
The Science of the Total Environment, 824:153621. ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, Science of the Total Environment, 824, 1. Elsevier bedrijfsinformatie b.v., Science of the Total Environment 824 (2022), Science of the Total Environment, 824
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The intensity of marine heatwaves is increasing due to climate change. Heatwaves may affect macroinvertebrates' bioturbating behavior in intertidal areas, thereby altering the deposition-erosion balance at tidal flats. Moreover, small-scale topographic features on tidal flats can create tidal pools during the low tide, thus changing the heat capacity of tidal flats. These pools could then potentially operate as refuge environments during marine heatwaves. We studied behavior responses to heat waves using the well-known bioturbating cockle Cerastoderma edule as a model species. Different temperature regimes (i.e., fluctuating between 20 and 40 °C) and micro-topographies (i.e., presence vs. absence of tidal water pools) were mimicked in a mesocosm experiment with regular tidal regimes. Our results demonstrate that behavioral responses to heat stress strongly depend on the site-specific morphological features. Cockles covered by shallow water pools moved up when exposed to thermal stress, while burrowing deeper into the sediment in the absence of water pools. But in both cases, their migratory behavior increased under heat stress compared to regular ambient treatments. Moreover, long-term cumulative heat stress increased cockles' respiration rates and decreased their health conditions, causing mass mortality after four weeks of gradually increasing heat exposure. Overall, the present findings provide the first insights into how bioturbating behavior on tidal flats may change in response to global warming.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Science of the Total Environment, 824:153621. ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, Science of the Total Environment, 824, 1. Elsevier bedrijfsinformatie b.v., Science of the Total Environment 824 (2022), Science of the Total Environment, 824
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e9c702d23234b705eb69a532fc6862bf