Future aquafeeds may compromise reproductive fitness in a marine invertebrate
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-19, 03:13authored byCamille WhiteCamille White, Dworjanyn, SA, Nichols, PD, Mos, B, Dempster, T
Aquaculture of higher trophic level species is increasingly dependent on the use of terrestrial oil products. The input of terrestrially derived n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) into marine environments has subsequently increased, with unknown consequences for recipient species. We exposed a sea urchin, <em>Heliocidaris erythrogramma</em> to three experimental diets for 78 days: a high n-3 PUFA marine imitation treatment, a high n-6 PUFA “future aquafeed” treatment and an intermediate “current aquafeed” treatment. Female urchins fed the high n-6 PUFA diet produced larvae with lower survival rates than all other treatments. Males fed the high n-6 PUFA diet produced no viable sperm. Fatty acid composition in reproductive material revealed comprehensive biosynthetic and dietary sparing capabilities in <em>H. erythrogramma</em>. Despite this, the ratio of n-6 PUFA to n-3 PUFA in reproductive tissue increased significantly with diet. We suggest alterations to this ratio is the likely mechanism of negative impact on larval development.