Salinity effects on the growth,mortality and shell strength of Balanus amphitrite from the Salton Sea,California |
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Authors: | Simpson E Paul Hurlbert Stuart H |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, 92182, U.S.A |
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Abstract: | The Salton Sea, the largest lake in California, has a salinity of around 43 g l-1 that is increasing by about 0.4 g l-1 y-1.
A 15 month microcosm experiment was conducted to determined the effects of salinity (30, 39, 48, 57, and 65 g l-1) and tilapia
( Oreochromis mossambicus) on an assemblage of benthic and planktonic Salton Sea algae and invertebrates, including the barnacle
Balanus amphitrite. Eleven months after the microcosms were established, acrylic plates containing newly settled B. amphitrite
collected at the Salton Sea were placed in the microcosms to determine the effects of salinity on their growth and shell strength.
The Brody-Bertalanffy growth model was fitted to the B. amphitrite growth data. Growth was fastest at 48 g l-1 and slowest
at 65 g l-1. B. amphitrite grown at 39–48 g l-1 were the largest and required the greatest force to break, but the strength
of the barnacle shell material declined steadily as the salinity increased. However, B. amphitrite at the higher salinities
were shorter and had thicker walls relative to their diameters, which may have increased their structural stability. The effects
of salinity on the mortality of adult B. amphitrite was determined in laboratory aquaria set up at 43, 60, 70, 75, 80, 90,
and 100 g l-1. Salinities were achieved in two ways: by salt addition and by evaporation. Calculated 12-day LC50 values were
83 g l-1 when salinities were achieved through salt addition and 89 g l-1 when salinities were achieved through evaporation.
Differences in B. amphitrite mortality between the two methods illustrate the importance of producing experimental salinity
levels carefully. B. amphitrite is expected to become extinct within the Salton Sea when the salinity reaches 70–80 g l-1
and to show marked declines in abundance at salinities as low as 50 g l-1.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date. |
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Keywords: | Saline lakes microcosms Brody-Bertalanffy salinity tolerance |
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