• Title of article

    Environmental hypoxia but not minor shell damage affects scope for growth and body condition in the blue mussel Mytilus edulis (L.)

  • Author/Authors

    Sanders، نويسنده , , Trystan and Widdicombe، نويسنده , , Steve and Calder-Potts، نويسنده , , Ruth and Spicer، نويسنده , , John I.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    74
  • To page
    80
  • Abstract
    The effects of short-term (7 d) exposure to environmental hypoxia (2.11 mg O2 L−1; control: 6.96 mg O2 L−1) and varying degrees of shell damage (1 or 2, 1 mm diameter holes; control: no holes) on respiration rate, clearance rate, ammonia excretion rate, scope for growth (SFG) and body condition index were investigated in adult blue mussels (Mytilus edulis). There was a significant hypoxia-related reduction in SFG (>6.70 to 0.92 J g−1 h−1) primarily due to a reduction in energy acquisition as a result of reduced clearance rates during hypoxia. Shell damage had no significant affect on any of the physiological processes measured or the SFG calculated. Body condition was unaffected by hypoxia or shell damage. In conclusion, minor physical damage to mussels had no effect on physiological energetics but environmental hypoxia compromised growth, respiration and energy acquisition presumably by reducing feeding rates.
  • Keywords
    Multiple stresses , Mytilus edulis , North-western Europe , Scope for growth , Shell damage , ecophysiology , Hypoxia , Eutrophication
  • Journal title
    Marine Environmental Research
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Marine Environmental Research
  • Record number

    2256572