Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17337
Title: Neuro-oxidative damage and aerobic potential loss of sharks under elevated CO2 and warming
Authors: Rosa, Rui
Ricardo Paula, José
Sampaio, Eduardo Martins
Pimentel, Marta S.
Lopes, Ana Rita
Baptista, Miguel
Guerreiro, Miguel
Santos, Catarina P.
Campos, Derek Felipe de
Almeida-Val, Vera Maria Fonseca
Calado, Ricardo
Diniz, M. S.
Repolho, T.
Keywords: Acidification
Antioxidant
Aquatic Community
Brain
Carbon Dioxide
Ecosystem Function
Ecosystem Structure
Enzyme Activity
Global Warming
Marine Environment
Oxic Conditions
Population Decline
Shark
Trophic Level
Chiloscyllium Punctatum
Chondrichthyes
Hemiscylliidae
Issue Date: 2016
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Marine Biology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 163, Número 5
Abstract: Sharks occupy high trophic levels in marine habitats and play a key role in the structure and function of marine communities. Their populations have been declining worldwide by ≥90 %, and their adaptive potential to future ocean conditions is believed to be limiting. Here we experimentally exposed recently hatched bamboo shark (Chiloscyllium punctatum) to the combined effects of tropical ocean warming (+4; 30 °C) and acidification (ΔpH 0.5) and investigated the respiratory, neuronal and antioxidant enzymatic machinery responses. Thirty days post-hatching, juvenile sharks revealed a significant decrease in brain aerobic potential (citrate synthase activity), in opposition to the anaerobic capacity (lactate dehydrogenase). Also, an array of antioxidant enzymes (glutathione S-transferase, superoxide dismutase activity and catalase) acted in concert to detoxify ROS, but this significant upregulation was not enough to minimize the increase in brain’s peroxidative damage and cholinergic neurotransmission. We argue that the future conditions may elicit deleterious deficiencies in sharks’ critical biological processes which, at the long-term, may have detrimental cascading effects at population and ecosystem levels. © 2016, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1007/s00227-016-2898-7
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