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Effects of the nutritional quality of food on the reproduction of copepods in the vicinity of Daya Bay nuclear power plant

Effects of the nutritional quality of food on the reproduction of copepods in the vicinity of Daya Bay nuclear power plant
Effects of the nutritional quality of food on the reproduction of copepods in the vicinity of Daya Bay nuclear power plant
This study investigated the regulatory mechanisms of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and environmental factors on copepods reproductive success in thermally influenced waters of Daya Bay through seasonal in-situ experiments (2022–2023). Generalized additive models revealed that fatty acid composition was the strongest predictor of reproductive variability, explaining 75.7–91.7% of variance in weight-specific egg production, in-situ egg production (IEP), and egg hatching rate (EHR). Temperature (18.15–29.63 °C) was positively correlated with IEP but exhibited a unimodal relationship with EHR, peaking at 24 °C. Salinity (31.33–33.72) suppressed IEP linearly, while particulate organic nitrogen (3.67–57.03 μg L−1) enhanced both IEP and EHR; Chlorophyll a showed no significant effect. Among PUFAs, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) was strongly positively correlated with all reproductive metrics, whereas docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) showed consistent negative correlations, likely due to competitive prey interactions or dinoflagellate toxin exposure. The ω-6 PUFA Linoleic acid (LA) displayed metabolic antagonism with ω-3 PUFAs, showing a unimodal relationship with IEP and negative correlation with EHR. Stations proximal to the power plant exhibited elevated summer temperatures but reduced fatty acid concentrations, highlighting that PUFAs-driven food quality, rather than phytoplankton biomass, critically governs copepods population dynamics in anthropogenically pressured ecosystems.
Copepods, Daya bay, Egg hatching rate, Egg production rate, PUFAs
0141-1136
Li, Haowen
0b7e89b1-7197-4241-a802-9b0c72deacc9
Si, Yueyue
da0cbb1d-cec8-426a-b537-4c7d4e2c1ef0
Chen, Mianrun
9dc47a98-b2bf-4b29-9b0b-cdc149295af3
Shen, Anglu
d46e927e-b06b-49ff-8fc3-0ac3ddd62d66
Li, Haowen
0b7e89b1-7197-4241-a802-9b0c72deacc9
Si, Yueyue
da0cbb1d-cec8-426a-b537-4c7d4e2c1ef0
Chen, Mianrun
9dc47a98-b2bf-4b29-9b0b-cdc149295af3
Shen, Anglu
d46e927e-b06b-49ff-8fc3-0ac3ddd62d66

Li, Haowen, Si, Yueyue, Chen, Mianrun and Shen, Anglu (2026) Effects of the nutritional quality of food on the reproduction of copepods in the vicinity of Daya Bay nuclear power plant. Marine Environmental Research, 218, [108046]. (doi:10.1016/j.marenvres.2026.108046).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study investigated the regulatory mechanisms of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and environmental factors on copepods reproductive success in thermally influenced waters of Daya Bay through seasonal in-situ experiments (2022–2023). Generalized additive models revealed that fatty acid composition was the strongest predictor of reproductive variability, explaining 75.7–91.7% of variance in weight-specific egg production, in-situ egg production (IEP), and egg hatching rate (EHR). Temperature (18.15–29.63 °C) was positively correlated with IEP but exhibited a unimodal relationship with EHR, peaking at 24 °C. Salinity (31.33–33.72) suppressed IEP linearly, while particulate organic nitrogen (3.67–57.03 μg L−1) enhanced both IEP and EHR; Chlorophyll a showed no significant effect. Among PUFAs, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) was strongly positively correlated with all reproductive metrics, whereas docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) showed consistent negative correlations, likely due to competitive prey interactions or dinoflagellate toxin exposure. The ω-6 PUFA Linoleic acid (LA) displayed metabolic antagonism with ω-3 PUFAs, showing a unimodal relationship with IEP and negative correlation with EHR. Stations proximal to the power plant exhibited elevated summer temperatures but reduced fatty acid concentrations, highlighting that PUFAs-driven food quality, rather than phytoplankton biomass, critically governs copepods population dynamics in anthropogenically pressured ecosystems.

Text
Revised Manuscript_Yueyue Si - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 5 April 2027.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 April 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 April 2026
Keywords: Copepods, Daya bay, Egg hatching rate, Egg production rate, PUFAs

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511669
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511669
ISSN: 0141-1136
PURE UUID: 56971056-63b9-4229-82b6-0af0e6475646
ORCID for Yueyue Si: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6016-0530

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 27 May 2026 16:31
Last modified: 28 May 2026 02:06

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Contributors

Author: Haowen Li
Author: Yueyue Si ORCID iD
Author: Mianrun Chen
Author: Anglu Shen

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