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Dryad Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Pascal, Ludovic; Cool, Joannie; Archambault, Philippe; Calosi, Piero; Cuenca, André L. R.; Mucci, Alfonso O.; Chaillou, Gwénaëlle 2023-10-18 <p><span lang="EN-CA">The O<sub>2 </sub>content of the global ocean has been declining progressively over the past decades, mainly because of human activities and global warming. Nevertheless, how long-term deoxygenation affects macrobenthic communities, sediment biogeochemistry and their mutual feedback remains poorly understood. Here, we evaluate the response of the benthic assemblages and biogeochemical functioning to decreasing O<sub>2 </sub>concentrations along the persistent bottom-water dissolved O<sub>2</sub> gradient of the Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence (QC, Canada). We report several of non-linear biodiversity and functional responses to decreasing O<sub>2</sub> concentrations, and identify an O<sub>2</sub> threshold that occurs at approximately at 63 µM. Below this threshold, macrobenthic community assemblages change, and bioturbation rates drastically decrease to near zero. Consequently, the sequence of electron acceptors used to metabolize the sedimentary organic matter is squeezed towards the sediment surface while reduced compounds accumulate closer (as much as 0.5 to 2.5 cm depending on the compound) to the sediment-water interface. Our results illustrate the capacity of bioturbating species to compensate for the biogeochemical consequences of hypoxia and can help to predict future changes in benthic ecosystems.</span></p>
SLGO Data Catalogue Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
Fisheries and Oceans Canada / Pêches et Océans Canada
Loiseau, Valentine; Calosi, Piero; Gendreau, Yanick; Cusson, Mathieu; Fisheries and Oceans Canada 2021-03-31 This inventory, taken from September 26 to October 3, 2019, aimed to describe the structures in species and then in functional traits of the macroalgae and benthic macroinvertebrate communities from the small estuaries of the Upper North Shore of Quebec, namely Barthelemy Bay and the Colombier, Mistassini, Franquelin and Saint-Nicolas rivers. Three hypoosmotic stress levels and one control level (marine water) were targeted for each of the selected estuaries, with eight quadrats per level. The highest stress level sites were located closest to the river mouths (where freshwater inflow is greatest at low tide) while the zero stress sites were located at the edge of the St. Lawrence Lower Estuary (where high salinity is stable). Salinity was measured with a portable refractometer and a Castaway-type CTD (Conductivity-Temperature-Density) probe. The inventory was conducted using a stratified random sampling design and the sampling unit was a quadrat measuring 25 x 25 cm. The dataset provided includes information on abiotic factors (salinity, substrate type) as well as the presence of various species of macroalgae and benthic macroinvertebrates, identified to the lowest possible species or taxonomic level. To obtain the density and biomass of the various species identified, contact Valentine Loiseau. This inventory is part of a doctoral study on global changes in the St. Lawrence system, mainly the study of marine benthic communities in response to changes in salinity, to ensure proper management of the environment in the face of future changes. The study has one main objective and four secondary objectives. The main objective is to describe the response of benthic communities in the mediolittoral zone to hypoosmotic stress (i.e. an abrupt decrease in salinity). Secondary objectives are: (1) to describe the structure and levels of specific and functional diversity of mediolittoral benthic macroinvertebrate and macroalgal communities along a salinity gradient; (2) to create a database of functional traits of interest for the most common species of the St. Lawrence marine mediolittoral zones; (3) to measure the responses (mortality, growth rate, calorific content) of three species of molluscs in the mediolittoral zone to a hypoosmotic stress gradient; and (4) to measure the responses of several species of benthic macroinvertebrates in the mediolittoral zone to several combined factors (hypoosmotic stress, acidification and turbidity increase). This project was funded by DFO's Coastal Environmental Baseline Program under Canada’s Oceans Protection Plan (OPP). This initiative aims at acquiring environmental baseline data that contribute to the characterization of important coastal areas and to support evidence-based assessments and management decisions, while preserving marine ecosystems. Consult the dataset also available on the [**Open Data Canada**](https://ouvert.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/9c96d46e-f45d-450d-9189-7e31b10fcde9) portal. Cet inventaire, prélevé du 26 septembre au 3 octobre 2019, décrit les structures d'espèces et de traits fonctionnels des communautés de macroalgues et de macroinvertébrés benthiques provenant des petits estuaires de la Haute-Côte-Nord du Québec, soit la baie Barthélemy et les rivières Colombier, Mistassini, Franquelin et Saint-Nicolas. Trois niveaux de stress hypoosmotique et un niveau de contrôle (eau marine) ont été choisis pour chacun des estuaires, à raison de huit quadrats par niveau. Les sites au niveau de stress le plus élevé se trouvaient le plus proches de l’embouchure des rivières (où l’apport en eau douce est le plus important à marée basse) tandis que les sites de stress faible à nul se trouvaient au bord de l’estuaire maritime du Saint-Laurent (où la salinité élevée est stable). La salinité a été mesurée avec un réfractomètre portable et une sonde CTD (Conductivity-Temperature-Density) de type Castaway. L’inventaire a été fait selon un plan d’échantillonnage aléatoire stratifié et l’unité d’échantillonnage était un quadrat mesurant 25 x 25 cm. Ce jeu de données comprend des informations sur les facteurs abiotiques (salinité, type de substrat) ainsi que sur la présence de diverses espèces de macroalgues et de macroinvertébrés benthiques, identifiées à l’espèce ou au niveau taxonomique le plus bas possible. Pour obtenir la densité et la biomasse des différentes espèces identifiées, communiquez avec Valentine Loiseau. Cet inventaire fait partie d’une étude doctorale sur les changements globaux du système du Saint-Laurent, principalement l’étude des communautés benthiques marines face aux changements de salinité, pour assurer une bonne gestion de l’environnement face aux changements futurs. L’étude comprend un objectif principal et quatre objectifs secondaires. L’objectif principal est de décrire la réponse des communautés benthiques de la zone médiolittorale face à un stress hypoosmotique (soit une diminution abrupte de la salinité). Les objectifs secondaires sont : (1) décrire la structure et les niveaux de diversités spécifiques et fonctionnels des communautés médiolittorales de macroinvertébrés et de macroalgues benthiques le long d’un gradient de salinité; (2) créer une base de données portant sur les traits fonctionnels d’intérêt des espèces les plus communes des zones médiolittorales marines du Saint-Laurent; (3) mesurer les réponses (mortalité, taux de croissance, contenu calorifique) de trois espèces de mollusques de la zone médiolittorale face à un gradient de stress hypoosmotique; et (4) mesurer les réponses de plusieurs espèces de macroinvertébrés benthiques de la zone médiolittorale face à plusieurs facteurs combinés (stress hypoosmotique, acidification et hausse de la turbidité). Ce projet a été financé par le Programme sur les données environnementales côtières de référence dans le cadre du Plan de protection des océans (PPO). Cette initiative vise l’acquisition de données environnementales de référence contribuant à la caractérisation de zones côtières d’importance ainsi qu’à favoriser les évaluations et les décisions de gestion fondées sur les données probantes, tout en préservant les écosystèmes marins. Consultez le jeu de données aussi disponible sur le portail de [**Données Ouvertes Canada**](https://ouvert.canada.ca/data/fr/dataset/9c96d46e-f45d-450d-9189-7e31b10fcde9). https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Vermandele, Fanny; Sasaki, Matthew; Winkler, Gesche; Dam, Hans G; Madeira, Diana; Calosi, Piero 2024 Specimens of the marine calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa were exposed for five days under laboratory conditions to the isolated or combined effects of hypoxia and a marine heatwave event to test for their sex-specific life-history and physiological responses to these stressors. Four treatments were used: control (C: 18 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.), hypoxia (H: 18 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.), marine heatwave (MHW: 25 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.) and combined conditions (HMHW: 25 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.). This dataset compiles all morphological and physiological measurements, namely routine metabolic oxygen consumption rates (µmol h⁻¹ and µmol mg⁻¹ h⁻¹), upper thermal limit (°C) as well as length (mm) and dry weight (µg) following the five-day laboratory exposure experiment. The experiment was conducted in the Marine Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology Laboratory (MEEP) at the University of Quebec in Rimouski (UQAR), Rimouski, QC, Canada. Copepods were maintained following the stock culture culturing protocol described in Dam et al. 2021 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-021-01131-5). Namely, approximately 200 copepods were kept in three 5 L aquaria filled with artificial seawater kept at a salinity of 28.4 ± 0.5. The physicochemical parameters of the seawater were the following: temperature of 18 ± 0.4 °C, oxygen saturation of 93.7 ± 6.0 %, pH NBS of 8.20 ± 0.09. The photoperiod was kept at 13h light: 11 h dark. Copepods were fed ad libitum with a mixture of three phytoplankters: Tetraselmis sp., Thalassiosira weissflogii and Rhodomonas salina. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Vermandele, Fanny; Sasaki, Matthew; Winkler, Gesche; Dam, Hans G; Madeira, Diana; Calosi, Piero 2024 Specimens of the marine calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa were exposed for five days under laboratory conditions to the isolated or combined effects of hypoxia and a marine heatwave event to test for their sex-specific life-history and physiological responses to these stressors. Four treatments were used: Control (C: 18 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.), Hypoxia (H: 18 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.), marine heatwave (MHW: 25 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.) and combined conditions (HMHW: 25 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.). This dataset compiles the survival data, expressed in terms of percentage and as the number of individuals at the beginning and end of exposure, for males and females, following the five-day exposure experiment. The experiment was conducted in the Marine Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology Laboratory (MEEP) at the University of Quebec in Rimouski (UQAR), Rimouski, QC, Canada. Copepods were maintained following the stock culture culturing protocol described in Dam et al. 2021 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-021-01131-5). Namely, approximately 200 copepods were kept in three 5 L aquaria filled with artificial seawater kept at a salinity of 28.4 ± 0.5. The physicochemical parameters of the seawater were the following: temperature of 18 ± 0.4 °C, oxygen saturation of 93.7 ± 6.0 %, pH NBS of 8.20 ± 0.09. The photoperiod was kept at 13h light: 11 h dark. Copepods were fed ad libitum with a mixture of three phytoplankters: Tetraselmis sp., Thalassiosira weissflogii and Rhodomonas salina. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Vermandele, Fanny; Sasaki, Matthew; Winkler, Gesche; Dam, Hans G; Madeira, Diana; Calosi, Piero 2024 Specimens of the marine calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa were exposed for five days under laboratory conditions to the isolated or combined effects of hypoxia and a marine heatwave event to test for their sex-specific life-history and physiological responses to these stressors. Four treatments were used: Control (C: 18 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.), Hypoxia (H: 18 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.), marine heatwave (MHW: 25 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.) and combined conditions (HMHW: 25 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.). This dataset contains fecundity measurement, represented as the number of offspring (eggs, nauplii and copepodites) spawned by females in each experimental condition following the five-day exposure experiment. The experiment was conducted in the Marine Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology Laboratory (MEEP) at the University of Quebec in Rimouski (UQAR), Rimouski, QC, Canada. Copepods were maintained following the stock culture culturing protocol described in Dam et al. 2021 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-021-01131-5). Namely, approximately 200 copepods were kept in three 5 L aquaria filled with artificial seawater kept at a salinity of 28.4 ± 0.5. The physicochemical parameters of the seawater were the following: temperature of 18 ± 0.4 °C, oxygen saturation of 93.7 ± 6.0 %, pH NBS of 8.20 ± 0.09. The photoperiod was kept at 13h light: 11 h dark. Copepods were fed ad libitum with a mixture of three phytoplankters: Tetraselmis sp., Thalassiosira weissflogii and Rhodomonas salina.----Eggs, offspring and copepodites were retrieved from each aquarium using a 41 µm sieve and placed in a small container. They were then counted one by one under a stereomicroscope (MDF41, Leica) and pipetted in a 500 mL glass beaker. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Vermandele, Fanny; Sasaki, Matthew; Winkler, Gesche; Dam, Hans G; Madeira, Diana; Calosi, Piero 2024 Specimens of the marine calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa were exposed for five days under laboratory conditions to the isolated or combined effects of hypoxia and a marine heatwave event to test for their sex-specific life-history and physiological responses to these stressors. Four treatments were used: Control (C: 18 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.), Hypoxia (H: 18 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.), marine heatwave (MHW: 25 °C, 100 % O₂ sat.) and combined conditions (HMHW: 25 °C, 35 % O₂ sat.). This dataset compiles the physico-chemical parameters of the seawater (i.e. temperature, oxygen saturation, pH and salinity) in the aquaria holding the copepods during the five-day exposure experiment. The experiment was conducted in the Marine Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology Laboratory (MEEP) at the University of Quebec in Rimouski (UQAR), Rimouski, QC, Canada. Copepods were maintained following the stock culture culturing protocol described in Dam et al. 2021 (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-021-01131-5). Namely, approximately 200 copepods were kept in three 5 L aquaria filled with artificial seawater kept at a salinity of 28.4 ± 0.5. The physicochemical parameters of the seawater were the following: temperature of 18 ± 0.4 °C, oxygen saturation of 93.7 ± 6.0 %, pH NBS of 8.20 ± 0.09. The photoperiod was kept at 13h light: 11 h dark. Copepods were fed ad libitum with a mixture of three phytoplankters: Tetraselmis sp., Thalassiosira weissflogii and Rhodomonas salina. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Guscelli, Ella; Noisette, Fanny; Chabot, Denis; Blier, Pierre U; Hansen, Tanya; Cassista-Da Ros, Manon; Pepin, Pierre; Skanes, Katherine R; Calosi, Piero 2024 This study aimed at determining the physiological responses of the northern shrimp, Pandalus borealis, at different levels of biological organization and from four different geographic origins, exposed to elevated temperature and low pH to define its sensitivity to future ocean warming and acidification. Shrimp sampled within the northwest Atlantic were exposed for 30 days to combinations of three temperature (2, 6 or 10°C) and two pH levels (7.75 or 7.40). Survival, metabolic rates, whole-organism aerobic performance and cellular energetic capacity were assessed at the end of the exposure.This dataset is included in the OA-ICC data compilation maintained in the framework of the IAEA Ocean Acidification International Coordination Centre (see https://oa-icc.ipsl.fr). Original data were downloaded from the PANGAEA dataset (see Source). In order to allow full comparability with other ocean acidification data sets, the R package seacarb (Gattuso et al, 2024) was used to compute a complete and consistent set of carbonate system variables, as described by Nisumaa et al. (2010). In this dataset the original values were archived in addition with the recalculated parameters (see related PI). The date of carbonate chemistry calculation by seacarb is 2024-05-13.This project was further supported by:- Strategic Program for Ecosystem- Based Research and Advice grant (SPERA)- Aquatic Climate Change Adaptation Services Program grant (ACCASP)- MITACS-Ouranos Accelerate grant- Réal-Decoste Ouranos scholarship, Award no. 286109 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
PANGAEA Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
PANGAEA
Guscelli, Ella; Chabot, Denis; Vermandele, Fanny; Madeira, Diana; Calosi, Piero 2023 The dataset contains information on the metabolomics reprogramming of the northern shrimp Pandalus borealis collected from four distinct geographic origins (i.e. St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE) 48° 35' N, 68° 35' W, May 2018 ; Eastern Scotian Shelf (ESS), 45° 23' N, 61° 04' W, February 2019 ; Esquiman Channel (EC), 50° 44' N, 57°29' W, July 2019 ; and Northeast Newfoundland Coast (NNC), 50° 18' N, 54° 16' W, November 2019) and exposed for 30 days under laboratory conditions to different ocean global change scenarios of temperature (2, 6, and 10 °C) and pH (7.75 and 7.40), in isolation and in combination. The dataset contains the concentration of key metabolites linked to the aerobic and anaerobic metabolism, expressed as ng metabolite per mg wet weight. Metabolite extraction, identification and quantification was carried out on shrimp muscle tissue by Les laboratoires Iso-BioKem Inc. in February/March 2021. This project was further supported by:1: The DFO Strategic Program for Ecosystem-Based Research and Advice2.The Aquatic Climate Change Adaptation Services Program3. FIR UQAR4. MITACS-Ouranos Accelerate5. The Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)6. Réal-Decoste Ouranos scholarship (286109) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

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