Kristin Aquilino, a scientist at the
University of California, Davis, knows that expectations are just
disappointments in disguise. Over the past decade, she has led the school’s
white abalone captive-breeding program, which aims to bring the marine mollusk
back from the brink of extinction.
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In June, she and her colleagues drove snails kept in captivity at
Davis down the California coast to
Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in Los Angeles.
Others were dropped off at labs and aquariums around Southern California; all
told, this was the largest spawning attempt of white abalone to date. But when
she tried to get them in the mood with what she calls a love potion — a mix of
seawater with hydrogen peroxide — the snails languished in their tanks
occasionally emitting bubbles, but no eggs or sperm. After four hours, Aquilino
called it off. (Simultaneous attempts at the other sites also failed.)
“It sucks,” she said. “There’s a lot of human effort involved, but
there’s no way they’ll spawn today.”
After fishermen depleted 99 percent of white abalone from the wild
in the 1970s, the sea snails are hanging on by a slimy thread. Despite the
urgency of breeding these and other endangered aquatic snails to reintroduce to
the wild, propagating more of them in a lab is still a guessing game, Aquilino
says.
Now, a study published February 24 in the journal Frontiers in
Marine Science offers an improved tool for determining which abalone will be
reproductive. The technique — using noninvasive ultrasound, a decades-old
medical technology — could raise the prospects of successful captive-breeding
efforts and ultimately help restore endangered abalone in the wild.
“If we can use this method, it could make a really big difference
and we might be able to strategically target animals to induce to spawn,” said
David Witting, a fisheries biologist at the
National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration who specializes in abalone recovery and was not involved in the
study. “We’ll take any more edge we can get. Getting animals to spawn is really
the pinch point for the whole process of recovering them.”
An undated photo shows a red abalone after it was studied by ultrasound. To bring abalone back from the edge of extinction, scientists need to find improved ways of coaxing the snails into reproducing.(Photo: Jackson Gross/NYTimes)
For Aquilino, the method offers a glimmer of hope.
“When I first saw the ultrasound images of my kids, I saw the
future of my family,” she said. “When I see the ultrasound images of these
abalone, I see the future of an entire species.”
Seven species of abalone — sea snails with colorful, domed shells
— have historically called the west coast of
North America home. The animals
help the ecosystems they live in by maintaining kelp forests, feeding marine
mammals and improving the health of reefs.
But over much of the 20th century, divers and fishermen depleted
several species of abalone. Aside from the white abalone, black abalone
succumbed to a
disease called withering syndrome, and pinto abalone in the
northern Pacific suffered from overharvesting and habitat degradation. In the
wild, abalone are terrible at long-distance relationships: In order to
reproduce, they must be within proximity of each other because the snails send
their gametes into the water column to get fertilized. By the 1990s, there were
so few of the endangered species that scientists realized they needed to
intervene.
Reproducing them in captivity, however, is a big challenge. There
are no clear cues for when they’re ready to reproduce. Researchers have
traditionally inspected the snails visually by prying them off whatever surface
they’re suctioned to, then looking for the crevice between their sticky feet
and shell to find a bulge, where the animal’s gonad is below the milky skin.
Depending on how large the gonad is, the scientists give the animal a score:
plump protrusions outrank smaller ones.
“That kind of gives you an idea of whether or not the animal may
spawn,” said Josh Bouma, abalone program director of the Restoration Fund in
Washington state, who heads the captive-breeding program for the endangered
pinto abalone.
But visual exams can be vastly inaccurate. The gonad surrounds
their stomachs, so if the snail just had a huge meal, the score can be
misleading. Researchers could also take a more accurate tissue sample, but it
would kill the snail. And handling abalone in any way — including popping them
from their aquarium tanks — is enough to stress them out and may kill their
mood.
Ultrasound, on the other hand, is noninvasive.
The idea of using ultrasound on these snails first came about in
2019. Jackson Gross, an aquaculture specialist at the
University of California,
Davis, had used ultrasound on fin fish, such as sturgeon, to study their
reproductive habits. He stumbled across a YouTube video of a veterinarian
sliding an ultrasound probe along the bottom of a land snail. If it worked for
land snails, wouldn’t it work for sea snails such as abalone, too?
Sara Boles, a postdoctoral researcher working with Gross,
discovered a way to perform ultrasounds on the abalone without taking them out
of their tanks by holding the device up to their sticky feet. This quickly
produced clear images of their swollen or flaccid gonads on a laptop appended
to the ultrasound probe.
In the new study, Boles and her colleagues examined more than 200
abalone and scored the thickness of their gonads on a scale of 1 to 5 to
determine which are likely to spawn. With the ultrasound images, the gonad
comes into focus: The stomach appears as a dark, cone-shaped item, and the
slightly lighter gonad surrounds it.
For now, these images can provide an easy way to score animals,
but Gross and his colleagues want to verify if gonad thickness also correlates
with reproductive success.
Already, Boles has used the ultrasound to help
Aquilino in her white abalone breeding efforts. Last spring, after Aquilino had
already visually scored the animals, Boles brought the ultrasound to her lab.
Of the eight white abalone that Boles rated highest after the
ultrasound exam, five spawned; some snails with slightly lower ratings did,
too. The method is already helping researchers revise their methods of
assessing which abalone are most ready to reproduce.
“It’s another way to help ensure that we have the best of the
best,” Boles said.
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