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First published online June 15, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2554-2566 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02259
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Following the heart: temperature and salinity effects on heart rate in native and invasive species of blue mussels (genus Mytilus)

Hopkins Marine Station, Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Oceanview Boulevard, Pacific Grove, CA 93950, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
somero{at}stanford.edu)
Accepted 11 April 2006
| Summary |
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Heart rate increased with rising temperature until a high temperature was reached at which point activity fell sharply, the high critical temperature (Hcrit). Hcrit increased with increasing acclimation temperature and differed among species in a pattern that reflected their probable evolutionary adaptation temperatures: M. galloprovincialis is more heat tolerant than the other two congeners. Ability to sustain heart function in the cold also reflected evolutionary history: M. trossulus is more cold tolerant than M. galloprovincialis.
Heart rates for all three congeners decreased gradually in response to acute reductions in salinity until a low salinity (Scrit) was reached at which heart rate dropped precipitously. Scrit decreased with decreasing salinity of acclimation and was generally lowest for M. galloprovincialis. Mortality during acclimation under common garden conditions was greatest in M. trossulus and was highest at high acclimation temperatures and salinities. These intrinsic differences in basal heart rate, thermal and salinity responses, acclimatory capacity, and survivorship are discussed in the contexts of the species' biogeographic patterning and, for the invasive species M. galloprovincialis, the potential for further range expansion along the Pacific coast of North America.
Key words: acclimation, biogeography, invasive species, Mytilus trossulus, Mytilus edulis, Mytilus galloprovincialis, salinity, temperature
| Introduction |
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There are three Mytilus blue mussel congeners worldwide:
Mytilus trossulus, M. edulis and M. galloprovincialis
(McDonald and Koehn, 1988
;
McDonald et al., 1991
). M.
trossulus is native to the North Pacific and is thought to have given
rise to the latter two species, from the North Atlantic and the North
Atlantic/Mediterranean, respectively
(Seed, 1992
). The blue mussel
species hybridize in all known regions of overlap but only M.
galloprovincialis has a demonstrated ability to invade novel locations,
including South Africa, Japan and California
(Seed, 1992
). The congeners
differ in their expected tolerance to habitat temperature and salinity, based
on their speciation pattern and on their current geographic distribution.
M. trossulus is thought to be the most tolerant of cold and low
salinity conditions as a species that originated in the North Pacific, while
M. galloprovincialis is thought to be the most tolerant of warm, high
salinity conditions as a species that originated in the Mediterranean
(Seed, 1992
). The third blue
mussel congener, M. edulis, is thought to have evolved from ancestral
M. trossulus (via a trans-Arctic migration) and given rise
to the Mediterranean population of blue mussels, which evolved into M.
galloprovincialis (Barsotti and
Meluzzi, 1968
; Vermeij,
1991
). M. edulis shares latitudinal overlap to the north
with M. trossulus (both occur at latitudes >66°N) and with
both species to the south (2835°N)
(Hilbish et al., 2000
).
Because M. galloprovincialis is limited in its northern distribution
(current known limit is Great Britain,
55°N), it is thought that this
species may be limited by cold conditions.
The California hybrid zone between M. trossulus and M.
galloprovincialis was only recently described
(McDonald and Koehn, 1988
;
McDonald et al., 1991
) and
thus has been the subject of relatively few studies. This zone of secondary
contact was created by the introduction of M. galloprovincialis to
Southern California, presumably by shipping, in the first half of the
twentieth century (Geller,
1999
; McDonald and Koehn,
1988
). M. galloprovincialis has replaced M.
trossulus over a large fraction of the California coast, from the Mexican
border to the approximate latitude of Monterey (37°N). In the Monterey and
San Francisco Bays, the native and invader coexist and are found in a mosaic
hybrid zone that comprises habitats differing widely in temperature and
salinity (Braby and Somero,
2006
). Although Mytilus blue mussels occur commonly on
the open coast of both the North Atlantic and parts of the North Pacific (in
addition to other geographic regions), they are rare in open coast habitats in
California, and abundant only in protected, often estuarine, sites. In these
protected sites, the mosaic hybrid zone pattern of Mytilus species is
hypothesized to be evidence of physiological adaptation to local abiotic
environmental conditions (Harrison and
Rand, 1989
; Sarver and Foltz,
1993
; Rawson et al.,
1999
). In support of this conjecture there is evidence that adult
distribution correlates with temperature and salinity gradients
(Sarver and Foltz, 1993
;
Suchanek et al., 1997
;
Rawson et al., 1999
;
Braby, 2004
;
Braby and Somero, 2006
). It is
suggested that M. trossulus is less tolerant of high temperature and
more tolerant of both low salinity and low temperature, consistent with the
evolutionary history of the species. It is known that Mytilus
congeners have different tolerances of high temperature and that thermal
tolerance changes with acclimation/acclimatization history
(Hofmann and Somero, 1996
;
Roberts et al., 1997
;
Buckley et al., 2001
). However,
these limited data on thermal physiology do not provide an adequate basis for
explaining the distribution patterns of the blue mussels or for predicting the
future course of the invasion by M. galloprovincialis.
Even less is known about the importance of salinity effects on the
distribution of these species. There is some evidence that M.
trossulus may be more euryhaline than the other blue mussel congeners,
although results to date are equivocal. Thus, although laboratory experiments
comparing growth rates and feeding in adult M. trossulus and M.
edulis across salinity treatments found no difference between the
congeners' performance (Gardner and
Thompson, 2001
), differences in larval survival rates of the two
species suggest that M. trossulus is more euryhaline
(Qiu et al., 2002
). However,
no physiological studies have addressed the question of whether M.
trossulus and M. galloprovincialis respond differently to
changes in salinity.
To elucidate the roles of temperature and salinity in establishing the
distribution patterns of blue mussels, we investigated the effects of acute
and acclimatory changes in temperature and salinity on heart function in
intact, immersed animals. Heart rate has been used successfully as a proxy for
whole-animal stress in Mytilids in response to toxins
(Davenport, 1977
;
Grace and Gainey, 1987
;
Depledge et al., 1996
;
Wedderburn et al., 2000
),
temperature (Pickens, 1965
;
Helm and Trueman, 1967
;
Coleman and Trueman, 1971
),
salinity (Stickle and Sabourin,
1979
; Nicholson,
2002
) and predation (Rovero et
al., 1999
). Here, we demonstrate that significant differences in
the responses of the three blue mussel congeners to variations in temperature
and salinity may account, at least in part, for their different distribution
patterns and may help to explain and predict the invasive success of M.
galloprovincialis.
| Materials and methods |
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Temperature stress and heart rate
To test the response of heart rate to simulated diel water temperature
fluctuations, we used increasing temperature ramps at a rate of change of
6°C h1, somewhat faster than the thermal changes seen in
blue mussel habitat during the summer months (maximum rate +1.6°C
h1) (Braby,
2004
). Each experiment consisted of a 1 h recovery period at the
acclimation temperature (to allow the animals to recover from the electrode
implantation procedure), followed by an increase in temperature (1°C per
10 min interval), while salinity was held constant at the acclimation level.
Temperature increases continued until all individuals showed a significant
drop in heart rate (the critical temperature, Hcrit)
(Fig. 2A), at which point we
stopped the temperature ramp, and decreased the temperature back to the
acclimation (initial) value. All animals that exhibited a stable basal heart
rate and a characteristic heat ramp response recovered from the heat stress. A
small subset of individuals (5 of 89 specimens) was not included in the
analysis because the heart activity of these individuals appeared erratic from
the beginning of the experiment.
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Salinity stress and heart rate
We used decreasing salinity ramps to test the response of heart rate to
salinity fluctuations, as seen in subtidal habitats during periods of spring
tides and heavy winter rain run-off (Fig.
2C) (Braby and Somero,
2006
). Each experiment consisted of a 1 h post-surgical recovery
period at the acclimation temperature, followed by a decrease in salinity
(23 p.p.t. h1), while temperature was held constant
at the acclimation level. We decreased chamber salinity by pumping in low
salinity water through a peristaltic pump, while an overflow valve kept the
volume of the experimental chamber constant. Each experiment continued until
all individuals showed a significant drop in heart rate (critical salinity,
Scrit), at which point we stopped the salinity ramp. All
animals that exhibited a stable heart rate at the beginning of the experiment
survived the salinity stress.
Effects of thermal and salinity acclimation on heart rate
During winters of 2003 and 2004, we conducted multi-factor acclimations
with six acclimation tanks in each year: three salinities (22 p.p.t., 28
p.p.t. and 34 p.p.t. in both years) and two temperatures (14°C and
21°C in 2003; 7°C and 14°C in 2004). These temperatures and
salinities are conditions that the mussels regularly encounter in the field in
the California hybrid zone (Braby and
Somero, 2006
). Two large temperature-controlled aquaria (550 l
each) served as water baths and held the three smaller acclimation tanks (75
l) with the salinity treatments. Each acclimation tank had its own
filtration/aeration unit and we exchanged half the tank volume each week with
temperature-equilibrated seawater of the appropriate salinity (from a mixture
of filtered seawater and deionized water or InstantOcean®
supersaturated seawater). The acclimation protocol was as follows: (1) animals
were initially held at 14°C and at their collection salinity for 2 days;
(2) acclimation tank salinity was changed by 1 p.p.t. day1
until it reached the target acclimation salinity; (3) temperature was changed
by 2°C day1 until it reached the target acclimation
temperature. Using temperature data loggers (Dallas Semiconductor, iButtons
with ±0.5°C accuracy, Dallas, TX, USA) and a salinity refractometer
(Reichert, temperature compensated, Depew, NY, USA), we monitored the
temperature and salinity every 2 days and adjusted these as needed.
Acclimation conditions stayed within ±1°C and ±1 p.p.t. of
the targeted temperatures and salinities throughout the acclimation period.
Every 2 days during the acclimation period, we fed animals commercially
available phytoplankton mix (Reed Mariculture, Shellfish Diet 1800
Formula). During the experimental period, we fed animals on a daily basis to
eliminate any potential experimental differences due to nutritional state. We
began each acclimation period with 30 individuals of each species (a total of
90 individuals per tank in 20023 and a total of 60 animals per tank in
20034) and we acclimated them for 3 weeks before beginning experiments.
On each experiment day, we removed six animals from one acclimation tank for
experimental purposes, as well as any sick (gaping) or dead animals. No effect
of holding (acclimation) time on heart rates or critical temperatures or
salinities was observed.
Data analysis
Because of the high variability of mussel heart beat amplitude over the
course of an experiment (Fig.
1), we were unable to use the PowerLab software directly to
calculate heart rate throughout the experiments. Thus, setting an arbitrary
threshold for amplitude failed to capture the effects of treatments on beats
min1. Instead, we extracted heart rate manually by selecting
the time period of interest and visually counting beats for the selected
period. We estimated beats min1 for 1 min time intervals,
selecting once every 5 min for heating ramps, once every 10 min for cooling
ramps and once every 20 min for salinity ramps. When the animal approached its
temperature or salinity limit, we calculated beats min1 for
every 1 min. For heat and salinity ramps, we mathematically derived critical
values by finding the common solution of the best-fit lines before and after
the distinct shift in heart rate (Stillman
and Somero, 1996
). When challenging animals with low temperature
stress, we calculated the lowest heart rate (LHR) during the 1 h holding
period near 0°C.
We evaluated the effects of treatments on these three response variables (Hcrit, Scrit and LHR) by applying a multiplicative three-factor ANOVA model with species, acclimation temperature, and acclimation salinity as the three factors. We followed the ANOVAs with post-hoc multiple comparisons (StudentNewmanKeuls, P=0.05), which compared species at each of the temperature/salinity combinations.
Genetic identification
Congeners in the Mytilus blue mussel complex are difficult to
distinguish because of their morphological similarity, so we genotyped all the
animals used in these experiments. We dissected animals after each experiment,
and during the 2003 experiments made qualitative notes of the reproductive
status of each individual (M. trossulus and M.
galloprovincialis were developed and M. edulis was not). We used
multiple DNA isolation protocols throughout the course of these experiments,
including membrane spin columns (Macherey-Nagel, Nucleospin®
DNA extraction kit, Easton, PA, USA), guanidinium salt and silica bead
extraction (Hoss and Paabo,
1993
), and Proteinase K tissue digestion [10 mmol
l1 Tris-HCl pH 8, 1 mmol l1 EDTA, 0.3%
Tween, 0.3% nonylphenyl-polyethylenglycol (Sigma, IGEPAL CA-630), 0.03 units
µl1 Proteinase K; 55°C for 12 h, 98°C for 10
min]. We used previously described polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based
methods to amplify two nuclear loci: the byssal thread protein locus
(Glu-5') (Rawson et al.,
1996
) and the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer region
(ITS-1) (Heath et al.,
1995
).
The Glu-5' locus amplifies a different sized fragment for M. galloprovincialis (300 bp), M. edulis (350 bp) and M. trossulus (240 bp), because of an insertion in the M. galloprovincialis gene and a double insertion in the M. edulis gene. An F1 M. trossulus/M. galloprovincialis hybrid (T/G hybrid) amplifies both sized fragments (240 bp and 300 bp). We used the published primers (F-GTAGGAACAAAGCATGAACCA; RGGGGGGATAAGTTTTCTTAGG), slightly modified PCR chemistry (15 µl reaction volume with 1 µl DNA template, 0.1 Units Taq polymerase, 1x Taq Buffer [50 mmol l1 KCl, 30 mmol l1 Tricine, pH 8.6], 200 nmol l1 dNTPs, 2 mmol l1 MgCl2, 300 nmol l1 of each primer) and slightly modified cycling conditions (initial denaturation of 1.5 min at 94°C; 35 cycles of 94°C for 20 s, 53°C for 30 s and 72°C for 45 s; final extension of 2 min at 72°C).
The ITS-1 locus amplifies a similar sized fragment in all three
species (
950 bp), but M. trossulus can be distinguished from
M. galloprovincialis/M. edulis by the number of recognition
sites for the HhaI restriction enzyme. After a restriction digest of
the PCR products, there are several fragments but two unique fragment sizes
(M. trossulus= 280 bp; M. galloprovincialis/M.
edulis=450 bp). We used the published primers (F-GTTTCCGTAGGTGAACCTG;
RCTCGTCTGATCTGAGGTCG), slightly modified PCR chemistry (same recipe as for
Glu-5', described above) and slightly modified cycling
conditions (initial denaturation of 1.5 min at 94°C; 30 cycles of 94°C
for 20 s, 55°C for 30 s and 72°C for 1 min; final extension of 2 min
at 72°C). To digest the PCR product, we then added 0.2 µl HhaI
enzyme (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, USA), 1.5 µl 10x buffer
(New England BiolabsBuffer 4) and 0.15 µl bovine serum albumin (100
µg ml1) to each PCR reaction and digested for 4 h at
37°C.
We visualized PCR products for both loci using gel electrophoresis on a 2% agarose gel, stained with ethidium bromide. To arrive at a final genotype designation, we scored individuals at each locus separately and then scored across both loci. These final designations are: M. galloprovincialis, M. trossulus, T/G hybrid (potentially includes backcrossed genotypes), and M. edulis.
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| Results |
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Heat stress and heart rate
In response to acute increases in measurement temperature, heart rate
initially increased and, then, abruptly decreased when the critical high
temperature (Hcrit) was reached
(Fig. 2A). During continued
exposure to temperatures >Hcrit, heart rate remained
depressed but quickly returned to the initial rate when the water bath was
returned to the initial experimental temperature (=acclimation temperature;
see Fig. 2A). This indicates
that the pronounced fall in heart rate that occurs when
Hcrit is reached is not lethal, but rather is a temporary
response to an elevated environmental temperature and is likely coincident
with valve closure (see Discussion).
Significant differences were observed in comparisons of the different species and, within a species, of differently acclimated individuals. All species exhibited increases in Hcrit as acclimation temperature was increased (Fig. 3B) (ANOVA, P<0.0001, Tables 1, 2). The combination of acclimation temperature and species explained a significant portion of the variation seen in Hcrit (ANOVA, P<0.0001, Tables 1, 2), but salinity acclimation was not a significant contributor to the observed pattern (P=0.7791).
Although not all interspecific comparisons were statistically significant at each temperature/salinity combination, there are consistent trends in Hcrit among species that suggest that the congeners respond differently to heat stress (Fig. 3B). Mytilus trossulus had the lowest Hcrit and so appears to be the most sensitive to heat stress, followed by M. edulis, and M. galloprovincialis. These relationships among the three species do not vary as a function of temperature acclimation. At the one acclimation treatment so studied (14°C, 28 p.p.t.), M. trossulus/M. galloprovincialis hybrids had Hcrit values intermediate to those of the parental species. Depending on acclimation salinity, M. trossulus increased its Hcrit by 1.83.4°C during acclimation to 21°C. Mytilus galloprovincialis and M. edulis showed slightly greater acclimatory plasticity as they increased Hcrit by 2.45.2°C and 2.04.7°C, respectively, during acclimation at 21°C.
Cold stress and heart rate
Heart rate fell steadily with decreasing measurement temperature, but no
sharp breaks in cardiac activity such as those seen during heating were
observed (Fig. 2A,B). After
cold stress and a return to the acclimation temperature, the heart rates of
both species tested (M. trossulus and M. galloprovincialis)
quickly recovered to values seen at the start of the experiment (acclimation
temperature). Comparing the lowest heart rates measured near 0°C (LHR)
(Fig. 3C), it is clear that
M. trossulus was able to maintain heart function at significantly
lower temperatures than M. galloprovincialis (ANOVA,
P<0.0001, Tables 1,
2) under most acclimation
conditions. Both species showed significant acclimation effects. The heart
rate of 14°C-acclimated animals was severely depressed by cold stress,
with a measurable heart rate only in M. trossulus and only at a
single salinity (28 p.p.t.). Following acclimation to 7°C, an increase in
heart rate of up to 6 beats min1 was observed in M.
trossulus, but for M. galloprovincialis heart rate increased by
only 2 beats min1. At common winter temperatures, therefore,
the heart rate of M. trossulus would exceed that of M.
galloprovincialis by at least two- to threefold, depending on
salinity.
Salinity stress and heart rate
Heart rate decreased gradually as the salinity of the medium was reduced
and exhibited a characteristically sharp drop when salinity reached a certain
low value, the critical low salinity (Scrit)
(Fig. 2C).
Scrit was positively correlated with acclimation salinity
in all species (Fig. 3D; Tables
1,
2). In addition,
Scrit was positively correlated with acclimation
temperature in some treatments. Acclimation to a higher temperature increased
Scrit of M. trossulus and M. edulis
(Fig. 3D, ANOVA,
P<0.0001, Tables 1,
2). Of all the species, M.
edulis was most affected by the interaction of warm temperature
acclimation and the response of heart rate to salinity, raising its
Scrit by 49 p.p.t., depending on the salinity of
acclimation. In contrast, M. galloprovincialis had a similar
Scrit, regardless of the acclimation temperature. Among
the congeners, heart rate of M. galloprovincialis is sustained at the
lowest ambient salinities, that of M. edulis ceases at the highest
Scrit, and M. trossulus is intermediate. Pilot
studies showed that M. trossulus/M. galloprovincialis hybrids were
not different in their salinity tolerance in comparison to the three congeners
at moderate acclimation levels (14°C and 28 p.p.t.)
(Scrit
11.8 p.p.t.).
Q10 and temperature compensation of heart rate during thermal acclimation
To determine whether temperature compensation of heart rate occurred during
thermal acclimation (14°C and 21°C), we calculated the Q10
of heart rate of 14°C-acclimated individuals (each species), using data
from the initial hour of heat ramps. The Q10 values differed only
slightly among species (M. galloprovincialis=2.38, M.
trossulus=2.03, M. edulis=2.08). We then used these
Q10 values to predict heart rate at the higher acclimation
temperature (21°C), in the absence of temperature compensation. We
calculated that we should see a 6070% increase in heart rate during
acclimation from 14°C to 21°C, if there were no temperature
compensation. In fact, we observed partial temperature compensation due to
acclimation, with rate increases of only 3564% in heart rate
(Fig. 4), depending on
acclimation treatment.
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| Discussion |
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Thermal physiology
Habitat temperature is often cited as a limiting factor determining where
ectothermic species can live (Hochachka
and Somero, 2002
). Because water temperature and blue mussel
species composition were highly variable among the sites we examined
(Braby, 2004
;
Braby and Somero, 2006
), any
observed differences between M. trossulus and M.
galloprovincialis in their responses to temperature could provide a
mechanistic explanation for the distribution of these species within the
mosaic hybrid zone present in San Francisco and Monterey Bays. Previous work
(Sarver and Foltz, 1993
) on
the distributions of these two congeners in this hybrid zone suggested that
M. trossulus was better adapted to conditions of low temperature and
low salinity than M. galloprovincialis. However, this earlier study
did not examine physiological traits, but focused strictly on the
distributions of the two species.
Our study provides evidence for genetically fixed differences in the
thermal responses of heart function among the three blue mussel congeners,
differences that may account, in part, for their current biogeographic
patterning and, in the context of predicting the further invasive success of
M. galloprovincialis, for the ability of this invader to extend its
range northward. Mytilus trossulus is more cold tolerant than the
invasive M. galloprovincialis, as evidenced by its capacity for
sustaining cardiac function at low temperatures
(Fig. 3C). Under winter
conditions, cardiac activity would be substantially lower in the invasive
species than in M. trossulus, a physiological difference that could
favor the native species at higher latitudes, where winter temperatures during
emersion may reach 0°C. Likewise, our discovery of a significantly higher
intrinsic rate of cardiac activity in M. trossulus relative to M.
galloprovincialis (Fig.
3A) suggests that the native species is more cold-adapted
(cold-compensated) than the Mediterranean invader. Our data on heart rates
provide an interesting complement to an earlier study of blue mussels
(Pickens, 1965
), which was
conducted before it was known that the blue mussels found along the Pacific
Coast of North America were not M. edulis, but instead comprised
M. trossulus, M. galloprovincialis and their hybrids. Pickens
reported that `M. edulis' populations from Alaska (putatively, M.
trossulus) had significantly higher heart rates than `M. edulis'
populations from Southern California (putatively, M.
galloprovincialis). We conjecture, therefore, that replacement of M.
trossulus by M. galloprovincialis at higher latitudes may be
impeded by the native species' better ability to sustain cardiac function at
colder temperatures.
Other studies support the view that M. trossulus has a more
cold-adapted physiology than M. galloprovincialis, and, therefore,
would be at a competitive advantage at low, but not high, temperatures. A
recent study (Fields et al.,
2006
) compared the thermal sensitivities of cytosolic malate
dehydrogenase (cMDH) of M. trossulus and M.
galloprovincialis and showed that the cMDH of M. trossulus
exhibited kinetic properties consistent with adaptation to lower temperatures
relative to the ortholog of M. galloprovincialis. Hofmann and Somero
provide additional evidence that M. trossulus is the more
cold-adapted species (Hofmann and Somero,
1996
), through showing that M. galloprovincialis induces
synthesis of heat-shock proteins at a higher temperature than M.
trossulus (in 13°C-acclimated animals, induction temperatures were
25°C and 23°C, respectively). The greater tolerance of high
temperatures by M. galloprovincialis, e.g. the higher values for
Hcrit (Fig.
3B), and the much lower mortality found at the highest acclimation
temperature (21°C) (Fig. 5)
indicate that this invasive species is likely to have a competitive advantage
over the native under conditions of high temperature. These differences could
underlie the success of the invader in replacing M. trossulus along
much of the coastline of southern and central California.
Although M. trossulus appears better adapted, physiologically and
biochemically, than M. galloprovincialis to function at low
temperatures and thus seems poised to out-compete the invader at higher
latitudes, the occurrence of higher mortality of M. trossulus under
common garden conditions at both low and high temperatures
(Fig. 5) raises a caveat about
the relative competitive abilities of these two species. Higher mortalities
for northern populations of `M. edulis' (likely, M.
trossulus) than for southern populations (likely, M.
galloprovincialis) have also been reported
(Pickens, 1965
). Pickens' data
and ours suggest that some currently unknown difference in robustness exists
between these two species, and these differences in adult survivorship could
potentially balance or even outweigh the competitive differences due to
differential adaptations to temperature at the physiological and biochemical
level.
Another caveat about the significance of physiological adaptations also
merits consideration. The sharp decreases in cardiac activity seen at extremes
of temperature may be a consequence of a complex behavioral response to
stress, rather than merely the direct effects of temperature on the heart
itself. Pickens compared the effects of temperature on hearts in situ
and on hearts isolated from the mussels
(Pickens, 1965
). Hearts under
both experimental conditions exhibited a similar Q10 effect as
measurement temperature was varied. However, the isolated hearts sustained
function at higher and lower temperatures than hearts in situ. The
differences in the thermal responses between these two experimental
preparations may arise from valve closure. A few studies have quantified valve
closure response to toxins (Depledge et
al., 1996
) and to salinity stress
(Nicholson, 2002
) in Mytilid
mussels. We qualitatively demonstrated that temperatures near
Hcrit elicited valve closure
(Braby, 2004
); however, this
was done after the experiments reported in this paper were completed. Thus,
the sharp fall in heart rate seen at temperature extremes in intact animals
could be a consequence of a behavioral response to stress, valve closure,
which in turn elicits physiological adjustments. Closing of the valves would
restrict gas exchange, thus limiting aerobic metabolism. Under conditions of
limiting oxygen, reductions (or cessations) of cardiac activity might be
necessary. In the context of thermal effects, valve closure responses could be
especially advantageous during periods of emersion, when the threat of
desiccation at high temperatures may be significant. Future research should
quantify valve closure in response to temperature (and salinity) stress and to
determine which comes first, valve closure or heart rate depression.
Salinity physiology
Valve closure, which we assume is coupled with a reduction in cardiac
activity under all circumstances, could also be important for immersed animals
facing sharp reductions in salinity, as might occur during winter rainstorms
in the northeastern Pacific. For osmoconformers like Mytilus,
reductions in ambient salinity will lead to dilution of the internal fluids
and perturbation of the ionic compositions of the cells. In Mytilus,
the physiological response to chronic hypo-osmotic conditions is to actively
change the cytosolic concentration of various organic osmolytes, including
free amino acids (Yancey et al.,
1982
), which may require 2 or more days to achieve
(de Vooys, 1991
;
Gosling, 1991
;
Hawkins and Bayne, 1991
).
However, in response to acute hypo-osmotic stress, conservation of the
composition of the body fluids would be favored by closing the valves and,
thereby, reducing exchange of water and solutes with the ambient seawater. In
the case of acute hypo-osmotic stress, therefore, it may be advantageous to
close the valves (and, consequently, reduce cardiac activity) at relatively
high salinities. Thus, a high Scrit might be advantageous
in coping with hypo-osmotic stress, for this would allow a mussel to isolate
its body fluids from falling salinity at an earlier stage of stress exposure.
Earlier studies have, in fact, shown that acute fluctuations in salinity
trigger valve closure in mussels (de Vooys,
1991
; de Zwaan and Mathieu,
1991
; Seed and Suchanek,
1991
).
Viewed from this perspective, the higher Scrit found for M. trossulus relative to M. galloprovincialis might represent an adaptation for coping with hypo-osmotic stress, which is apt to be more common in coastal Pacific habitats than in the Mediterranean Sea. If this is the case, then another difference between the native and invasive species appears to be important in determining their biogeographic patterns and in determining the further invasive movement of M. galloprovincialis. The greater ability of M. trossulus to isolate its internal fluids from hypo-osmotic stress could help it to out-compete M. galloprovincialis in habitats where such stress is prevalent. Especially during winter storms, when the combination of low temperatures and reduced salinity exists in coastal regions, M. trossulus might be significantly better able to function than its invasive competitor. We conjecture that the reduction in feeding time and the depression in metabolic activity that are likely to result from valve closure are more than balanced by the reduction in physiological stress associated with volume regulation due to hypo-osmotic conditions.
Scrit varied directly with acclimation salinity, such
that animals held at the high salinity reduced cardiac activity at higher
salinities than specimens acclimated to lower salinities
(Fig. 3D). Acclimation
temperature also influenced Scrit. For M. trossulus,
Scrit is lower in 14°C-acclimated specimens relative to
21°C-acclimated specimens (Fig.
3D). This finding suggests that winter-acclimatized individuals
may be better able to cope with reduced salinities than summer-acclimatized
individuals. There was relatively little change in Scrit
during thermal acclimation in M. galloprovincialis. M. edulis
exhibited the largest changes in Scrit as functions of
acclimation conditions. Our experiments did not monitor the time course of the
change in Scrit during acclimation, but a recent study
shows that cyclical hypo-osmotic stress confers greater salinity tolerance
with each cycle (quantified by valve closure)
(Sukhotin et al., 2003
) and
that this increased tolerance occurs over the course of a few hours.
Hybrid physiology
Hybrids between M. trossulus and M. galloprovincialis
exhibited intermediate values for resting heart rate
(Fig. 3A) and
Hcrit (Fig.
3B). Scrit values fell within the range of the
parental species (Fig. 3D).
These limited data provide no evidence for any distinct advantage or
disadvantage on the part of adult hybrids. However, there is some indication
from reproductive studies that larval success of hybrid crosses of these two
species is lower than for parental species
(Matson et al., 2003
).
What is the most critical physiological factor in setting distribution patterns of blue mussels?
Our studies of adult blue mussels reveal a number of physiological
differences that correlate with the species' distribution patterns. M.
galloprovincialis is better able to cope with higher temperatures than
either M. trossulus or M. edulis. Assuming that a high value
for Scrit, which is likely paired with valve closure,
denotes an adaptive response to hypo-osmotic stress, then M.
trossulus appears better adapted than its invasive competitor to tolerate
reduced salinity. These differences between M. trossulus and M.
galloprovincialis in tolerance of thermal and salinity extremes are
consistent with the evolutionary histories of the two species. However,
despite this agreement between physiological response and evolutionary
history, two important questions about the role of these physiological
differences in setting distribution patterns remain. First, which
environmental variable is more important in setting distributions, temperature
or salinity? Second, do the physiological data obtained in this study reflect
the distribution patterns of the native and invasive species within the mosaic
hybrid zone found in the San Francisco and Monterey Bays?
Based on our study of the distributions of the native and invasive species
within this mosaic hybrid zone (Braby and
Somero, 2006
), it appears that salinity is the more important
variable in the context of determining the distribution of species. Thus,
M. trossulus was found to be dominant in the warmest habitats
studied, which are shallow estuarine regions with the highest variation in
salinity.
Adult distribution patterns may also reflect differences in larval
recruitment over space and time and different sensitivities of congeneric
larvae to environmental factors. Other studies of Mytilus have shown
that the larvae of Mytilus congeners have differences in mortality
due to salinity and temperature treatments
(Matson et al., 2003
;
Qiu et al., 2002
). In the case
of the two Pacific coast species used in this study, there is only limited
knowledge of where larvae spend most of their planktonic life. In the open
ocean, there is likely to be little variation in temperature and salinity. The
degree to which larvae are subject to coastal variability in both temperature
and salinity is highly dependent on their retention in bays and estuaries. If
high retention occurs, then larval physiology may play a significant role in
determining adult distribution patterns. In fact, there is some evidence that
Mytilus may be recruiting more locally than previously thought
(Gilg and Hilbish, 2003
).
Nonetheless, the differences in adults' responses to temperature and salinity
reported here suggest that genetically fixed differences in physiological
traitsdifferences that are likely present in larval stages as
wellmake a strong contribution to distribution patterns, including
those of invasive species.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
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