Measurement of aerobic scope during the whole embryonic development of a cephalopod

In the context of global warming, the present study aimed to identify at which stages the embryos of the holobenthic species Octopus maya are the most sensitive to temperature. We used temperature as a tool to induce minimum (TIMR-min: 11°C) and maximum metabolic rates (TIMR-max: 30°C) on embryos that came from three wild females caught off Sisal harbor (21°10'N, 90°02'W; Yucatán, Mexico) in March 2016. Higher metabolic rate values were recorded at stages XV and XVI, when the three hearts start beating, compared to stage X, when organogenesis begins. The factorial metabolic scope (FMS = TIMR-max ? TIMR-min) was higher at stages XV and XVI than the more mature stages, establishing stage XVII as the most vulnerable. High temperature exposure applied only during the earliest developmental stages (until stage XV) could have adaptive advantages if spawning occurs during hot waves in tropical coastal zones where the embryos are incubated or used for aquaculture purposes by shortening the time before hatching without physiological costs.

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Cite this as

Tremblay, Nelly, Caamal-Monsreal, Claudia, Ortega, Karen, Díaz, Fernando, Celdrán, David, Rosas, Carlos (2017). Dataset: Measurement of aerobic scope during the whole embryonic development of a cephalopod. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.873863

DOI retrieved: 2017

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 29, 2024
Last update November 29, 2024
License CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.873863
Author Tremblay, Nelly
Given Name Nelly
Family Name Tremblay
More Authors
Caamal-Monsreal, Claudia
Ortega, Karen
Díaz, Fernando
Celdrán, David
Rosas, Carlos
Source Creation 2017
Publication Year 2017
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Tremblay-etal_2017
Subject Areas
Name: Biosphere

Name: Oceans

Related Identifiers
Title: Measurement of aerobic scope during the whole embryonic development of a cephalopod
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Source: Marine Biology
Authors: Tremblay Nelly , Caamal-Monsreal Claudia , Ortega Karen , Díaz Fernando , Celdrán David , Rosas Carlos .