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CORDIS

Evolution of Planktonic Gastropod Calcification

Project description

Studying OA’s effects on calcification

Ocean acidification (OA) reduces the amount of calcium carbonate in seawater, placing a wide range of species, including planktonic gastropods, at risk of calcification. Planktonic gastropods are specifically presumed to be the most vulnerable organisms since they inhabit the ocean’s surface and have thin shells of aragonite. However, current research has only focused on short-term exposure to extreme OA conditions. The EU-funded EPIC project aims to study the prosses by which calcification evolves in planktonic gastropods and forecast their evolutionary potential under long-term OA exposure. In this context, EPIC will study the micro- and macro-evolutionary effects of OA, allowing for a better prognosis of global change’s impact on marine calcifiers.

Objective

Calcification by marine organisms can be drastically affected by ocean acidification (OA) due to a reduced availability of calcium carbonate in seawater. Planktonic gastropods (pteropods and heteropods) are believed to be among the most vulnerable organisms to OA as they live at the ocean surface and build thin shells of aragonite. Shelled pteropods have received considerable attention and are reported to decrease calcification rates and experience shell dissolution under high CO2 conditions. Shelled heteropods have received much less attention, but are expected to be equally vulnerable. However, the vulnerability of planktonic gastropods is based on short-term exposures to extreme OA conditions. The aim of the proposed project is to study the evolution of calcification in planktonic gastropods and assess its evolutionary potential under OA. Planktonic gastropods build shells through a biomineralization process, controlled at the molecular level, but the genes underlying this process are unknown. Using shell proteomics will enable to identify for the first time the biomineralization genes in pteropod and heteropod species. Next, these genes will be used to understand how biomineralization evolved in the two independent plankton groups over long and short timescales. Over long timescales will include building solid macro-evolutionary frameworks using fossil-calibrated phylogenomic trees and analysis of the evolution of biomineralization genes. Over short timescales will involve studies at the population-level by measuring gene expression under past, present and future concentrations of CO2. The proposed action will allow the discovery of new molecular markers to investigate the impacts of OA. Combining macro- with micro-evolutionary approaches will shed light on the processes that drive diversity and evolution of calcification in planktonic gastropods and will allow more realistic predictions of the consequences of global change on marine calcifiers.

Coordinator

STICHTING NATURALIS BIODIVERSITY CENTER
Net EU contribution
€ 175 572,48
Address
DARWINWEG 2
2333 CR Leiden
Netherlands

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Region
West-Nederland Zuid-Holland Agglomeratie Leiden en Bollenstreek
Activity type
Research Organisations
Links
Total cost
€ 175 572,48