Project: Collaborative Research: Response of marine copepods to warming temperature and ocean acidification

Acronym/Short Name:Copepod Response to Warming Temp and OA
Project Duration:2016-06 - 2021-05
Geolocation:North western Atlantic ocean; Gulf of Maine, coastal and estuarine habitats

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
Over time, our oceans are becoming both warmer and higher dissolved carbon dioxide. The latter condition is called ocean acidification. The consequences of these simultaneous changes for populations of marine organisms are not well understood. For this project, the investigators will conduct a series of laboratory experiments to determine how two closely-related, common species of Acartia copepods will respond to the interactive effects of warming and acidification and also how well these species can adapt over multiple generations to changing ocean conditions. Since these copepods are key species in coastal food webs, results will have important implications for understanding and predicting how marine ecosystems may respond to future climate change. The investigators will share results from the research through traditional print media, case studies, and video mini lectures. The goal will be for educators of all levels to easily access material on climate change and ocean acidification to include in teaching curricula, in alignment with recommendations for universal design for learning. The project is a collaborative effort between an established professor at the University of Connecticut and an early-career female scientist at the University of Vermont. It will provide training and opportunities for collaborative, interdisciplinary research for two postdoctoral investigators, two graduate students and an undergraduate student.

The project's main goals are: 1) to test the simultaneous effects of temperature and carbon dioxide under current and future conditions on life history traits throughout the life cycle for two key copepod species, warm-adapted Acartia tonsa and cold-adapted Acartia hudsonica; 2) to test for adaptive capacity of both copepod species to a warmer and carbon-dioxide-enriched ocean; 3) to measure the genetic and maternally-induced changes across multiple generations of experimental selection in future conditions in both copepod species, and to identify the genes and pathways responding to selection. The investigators will use experiments encompassing current and projected temperature and carbon-dioxide conditions, will determine the roles of each variable and their interaction on traits that affect the fitness of both copepod species. They will also determine which life stages are most sensitive to individual or simultaneous stress conditions. Through multigenerational selection experiments, the investigators will identify and characterize the mechanisms of copepod evolutionary adaptation. Finally, they will measure genomic changes across the generations under all four experimental conditions to quantify the relative contributions of genetic and maternally-induced change in the physiological and life history traits of copepods in response to near-future climate conditions.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Development (i.e. maturation) time measurements for Acartia hudsonica during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA)2024-04-03Final no updates expected
Body size measurements collected for Acartia hudsonica during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA)2024-04-03Final no updates expected
Egg production rate (EPR) and egg hatching success (HS) data for Acartia tonsa during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA)2024-04-02Final no updates expected
Survivorship measurements collected for Acartia hudsonica during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA)2024-04-01Final no updates expected
Population fitness measurements collected for Acartia hudsonica during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA) 2024-03-29Final no updates expected
Population fitness measurements collected for Acartia tonsa during multigenerational exposure to ocean warming (OW), ocean acidification (OA), and combined ocean warming and acidification (OWA)2024-03-28Final no updates expected
Acartia tonsa development time for transgenerational experiment2023-09-07Final no updates expected
Acartia tonsa body size data for transgenerational ocean warming and acidification experiments2023-09-07Final no updates expected
Acartia tonsa survival data for transgenerational ocean warming and acidification data2023-09-07Final no updates expected
Acartia tonsa egg production rate and egg hatching success for transgenerational exposure to ocean warming and ocean acidification2023-09-07Final no updates expected
Sex-specific body size measurements from two copepod populations in the Coastal Northwest Atlantic Surface Waters from 2017-07-16 to 2017-08-252020-07-15Final no updates expected
Individual thermal stress survivorship measurements from 10 copepod populations from Coastal Northwest Atlantic Surface Waters from 2017-07-15 to 2018-07-262020-07-08Final no updates expected
Sex-specific thermal stress survivorship measurements from two copepod populations in the Coastal Northwest Atlantic Surface Waters from 2017-07-16 to 2017-08-25 2020-07-08Final no updates expected
Individual egg production measurements from 10 copepod populations from 2017-07-15 to 2018-07-26 in coastal northwest Atlantic surface waters2020-07-08Final no updates expected

People

Lead Principal Investigator: Hans G. Dam
University of Connecticut (UConn)

Principal Investigator: Melissa Pespeni
University of Vermont (UVM)

Co-Principal Investigator: Hannes Baumann
University of Connecticut (UConn)

Co-Principal Investigator: Michael Finiguerra
University of Connecticut (UConn)

Contact: Melissa Pespeni
University of Vermont (UVM)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Pespeni_Dam_OCE-1559075_OCE-1559180.pdf (188.60 KB)
02/09/2025