The embryonic life history of the tropical sea hare Stylocheilus striatus (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia) under ambient and elevated ocean temperatures

PeerJ. 2017 Feb 1:5:e2956. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2956. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Ocean warming represents a major threat to marine biota worldwide, and forecasting ecological ramifications is a high priority as atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions continue to rise. Fitness of marine species relies critically on early developmental and reproductive stages, but their sensitivity to environmental stressors may be a bottleneck in future warming oceans. The present study focuses on the tropical sea hare, Stylocheilus striatus (Gastropoda: Opisthobranchia), a common species found throughout the Indo-West Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Its ecological importance is well-established, particularly as a specialist grazer of the toxic cyanobacterium, Lyngbya majuscula. Although many aspects of its biology and ecology are well-known, description of its early developmental stages is lacking. First, a detailed account of this species' life history is described, including reproductive behavior, egg mass characteristics and embryonic development phases. Key developmental features are then compared between embryos developed in present-day (ambient) and predicted end-of-century elevated ocean temperatures (+3 °C). Results showed developmental stages of embryos reared at ambient temperature were typical of other opisthobranch species, with hatching of planktotrophic veligers occurring 4.5 days post-oviposition. However, development times significantly decreased under elevated temperature, with key embryonic features such as the velum, statocysts, operculum, eyespots and protoconch developing approximately 24 h earlier when compared to ambient temperature. Although veligers hatched one day earlier under elevated temperature, their shell size decreased by approximately 20%. Our findings highlight how an elevated thermal environment accelerates planktotrophic development of this important benthic invertebrate, possibly at the cost of reducing fitness and increasing mortality.

Keywords: Elevated temperature; Embryonic development; Life history; Ocean warming; Opisthobranch; Sea hare; Stylocheilus striatus.

Grants and funding

The project was supported financially by the Agence National de Recherche (ANR-11-JSV7-012-01/Live and Let Die to SCM), LabEx “CORAIL” (ACCLIMACID to RH and SCM), Fondation TOTAL (Ecosystem to SCM) and the European Commission’s Erasmus programme that made possible for MJ to spend a semester as a research assistant at CRIOBE as part of the agreement between Ulster University (Northern Ireland) and the University of French Polynesia. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.