Abstract
Laboratory experiments examining the effects of ultraviolet radiation (UVR, 290–400 nm) on DNA damage were carried out using the embryos of three species of sea urchins from different habitats; Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis from the Gulf of Maine, Sterechinus neumayeri from the Antarctic, and Evechinus chloroticus from New Zealand. All three species exhibited significant amounts of accumulated DNA damage, measured as cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) photoproducts, when exposed to UVR in the laboratory. Biological weighting functions (BWFs) revealed that S. neumayeri has significantly higher sensitivity to UVR-induced DNA damage across most of the UVR spectrum compared to the other two species, and all species were observed to have weightings in the ultraviolet-A (UVA, 320–400 nm) portion of the spectrum. The increased sensitivity to ultraviolet-B (290–320 nm) and UVA in S. neumayeri is correlated with the lowest concentration of UVR absorbing compounds observed in the embryos of the three species of urchin used in this study. Sea urchin embryos and larvae in the respective habitats of the species tested are known to occur within 5 m of the surface of the ocean where both UVB and UVA wavelengths occur. Solar irradiances of UVR at a depth of 5 m, weighted using the urchin DNA damage BWFs, show that E. chloroticus receives the greatest amount of biologically effective UVR despite having the lowest wavelength dependent weightings for DNA damage when compared to the other two species.
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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