Eastern oysters alter inducible defense mechanism of shell strengthening with age
Sarah H. Roney, Gary H. Dickinson, Benjamin A. Belgrad, Marc J. Weissburg

TL;DR
Eastern oysters strengthen their shells to avoid predators, using different strategies as they grow older.
Contribution
The study reveals that oysters switch between shell thickness and hardness as defense mechanisms depending on their age.
Findings
Younger oysters showed no significant changes in shell properties in response to predator cues.
Older oysters increased shell thickness by 33% and hardness by 12% in response to predator cues.
Oysters use multiple defense mechanisms to balance predation risk and energy costs.
Abstract
Eastern oysters, Crassostrea virginica, use inducible defenses in the form of strengthened shells to reduce their risk of predation. Inducible defenses often have trade-offs between the costs and benefits associated with the organism's fitness, as developing defenses requires energetic resources. Shell strength is a product of the amount of material laid by the animal (thickness) and the material properties of the shell (e.g. hardness and fracture resistance). Previous studies have suggested that oysters may trade off between shell thickness or shell hardness as a mechanism for increasing shell strength against predation, which are hypothesized to have different energetic requirements. The present study analyzed the shell structural (thickness of composite layers) and micromechanical properties (microhardness and crack propagation tested within individual shell layers) of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies · Calcium Carbonate Crystallization and Inhibition · Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry
