A Naïve Population of European Oyster Ostrea edulis with Reduced Susceptibility to the Pathogen Bonamia ostreae: Are S-Strategy Life Traits Providing Protection?

Author:

Egerton Sian1,Lynch Sharon A1,Prado-Alvarez Maria2,Flannery Grace3,Brennan Elaine1,Hugh-Jones Tristan45,Hugh-Jones David45,Culloty Sarah C16

Affiliation:

1. Aquaculture and Fisheries Development Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

2. Marine Molecular Pathobiology Research Group, Institute of Marine Research, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain

3. Sacred Heart University, Dingle, Ireland

4. Atlantic Shellfish Ltd, Rossmore, Carrigtwohill, Co. Cork, Ireland

5. Loch Ryan Oysters, Loch Ryan, Scotland, UK

6. MaREI centre, Environmental Research Institute, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Abstract

Synopsis European populations of the native flat oyster, Ostrea edulis, have been heavily depleted by two protozoan parasites, Marteila refringens and Bonamia ostreae, with mortalities of up to 90% reported in naïve populations. However, in studies carried out over a 10-year period, researching the parasite–host relationship of B. ostreae and O. edulis in several age cohorts within a naïve O. edulis population from Loch Ryan (LR), Scotland, 1364 specimens were challenged and only 64 (5%), across multiple testing protocols, screened positive for B. ostreae. This article presents a case for the development of S-strategy life traits in the LR population that coincide with enhanced immune function and survival. Oysters are considered typical r-strategists (small in size with fast development and high fecundity) while S-strategists, as outlined in Grime’s (1977) competitor–stress tolerant–ruderal (C–S–R) triangle theory, are characterized by slow growth and investment in the durability of individuals. This study hypothesizes that slower growth and reduced reproductive output in LR oysters has resulted in the investment of an enhanced immune function and reduced susceptibility to B. ostreae that is, r-strategists with S-strategy life traits equates to protection from significant pathogens. The findings presented here within provide a strong case study for local adaptation of energy allocation and provides empirical support for the C–S–R triangle theory in a marine organism.

Funder

EU CRAFT

BOLC

EU funded studies SUSFISH

OYSTERRECOVER

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference105 articles.

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2. The role of constraints and limitation in driving individual variation in immune response;Ardia;Functional Ecology,2011

3. Effects of temperature and salinity on the survival of Bonamia ostreae, a parasite infecting flat oysters Ostrea edulis;Arzul;Diseases of aquatic organisms,2009

4. New perspective on the haplosporidian parasites of molluscs;Arzul;Journal of invertebrate pathology,2015

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