Elizabeth Gosling

Marine Mussels


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et al. 2002; see Chapter 7 for salinity tolerance values in marine mussels).

      Tomanek et al. (2012) examined the proteomic responses to hyposaline stress in M. trossulus and M. galloprovincialis, whose ranges overlap on the west coast of N. America (see earlier). Mussels were exposed to short time periods (4 hr) of hyposaline stress, followed by a recovery period to mimic conditions typical for bays and coastal areas experiencing heavy freshwater input, with a quick return to full salinity with incoming tides and mixing with full‐strength seawater. The differences in protein abundances in gill tissue suggested that M. trossulus was able to respond to a greater hyposaline challenge (24.5 psu) than M. galloprovincialis (29.8 psu). These differences, in a scenario of reduced coastal salinities, may enable M. trossulus to cope with greater hyposaline stress and outcompete M. galloprovincialis in the southern part of the M. trossulus range, thereby preventing M. galloprovincialis from expanding northward. Interestingly, Lockwood & Somero (2011b), in a transcriptomic analysis of gill tissue of Mytilus specimens from the same experiment (but limited to 29.8 and 35.0 psu), found no major differences in salinity stress tolerance between the two congeners at the level of transcriptional regulation.

Schematic illustration of map of the Benguela Current region bordering Namibia and South Africa, showing the 500 m depth contour (dashed line) and the approximate locations of the Lüderitz upwelling cell and the Agulhas Current.

      Source: From Roux et al. (2013). Reproduced with permission from the Bulletin