Citric Acid Injections: An Accessible and Efficient Method for Controlling Outbreaks of the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Acanthaster cf. solaris
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Collection Site and Maintenance Conditions
2.2. Experiment 1: Concentration and Number of Injection Sites
2.3. Experiment 2: Volume
2.4. Experiment 3: Seawater vs Distilled Water
2.5. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Experiment 1: Concentration and Number of Injection Sites
Behaviour and Macroscopic Progression
3.2. Experiment 2: Volume
3.3. Experiment 3: Water Type
4. Discussion
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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 ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected with 20 mL of citric acid and seawater solution at concentrations of 90, 120, and 150 g·L−1 in one (i), two (ii) and four (iii) injection sites (I.S.). Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality; where no numbers are shown, mortality was equal to 100%. For the 150 g·L−1, 4 I.S. treatment, time to immobility was assumed to equal time to death (
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected with 20 mL of citric acid and seawater solution at concentrations of 90, 120, and 150 g·L−1 in one (i), two (ii) and four (iii) injection sites (I.S.). Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality; where no numbers are shown, mortality was equal to 100%. For the 150 g·L−1, 4 I.S. treatment, time to immobility was assumed to equal time to death (   ). Six replicates per treatment combination were used. Letter notations above bars (a, b, c) indicate Tukey’s post-hoc groupings between injection site treatments and concentrations for time to death. Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments.
). Six replicates per treatment combination were used. Letter notations above bars (a, b, c) indicate Tukey’s post-hoc groupings between injection site treatments and concentrations for time to death. Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments.
   ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected with 20 mL of citric acid and seawater solution at concentrations of 90, 120, and 150 g·L−1 in one (i), two (ii) and four (iii) injection sites (I.S.). Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality; where no numbers are shown, mortality was equal to 100%. For the 150 g·L−1, 4 I.S. treatment, time to immobility was assumed to equal time to death (
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected with 20 mL of citric acid and seawater solution at concentrations of 90, 120, and 150 g·L−1 in one (i), two (ii) and four (iii) injection sites (I.S.). Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality; where no numbers are shown, mortality was equal to 100%. For the 150 g·L−1, 4 I.S. treatment, time to immobility was assumed to equal time to death (   ). Six replicates per treatment combination were used. Letter notations above bars (a, b, c) indicate Tukey’s post-hoc groupings between injection site treatments and concentrations for time to death. Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments.
). Six replicates per treatment combination were used. Letter notations above bars (a, b, c) indicate Tukey’s post-hoc groupings between injection site treatments and concentrations for time to death. Different letters indicate significant differences among treatments.
 ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with either 20 mL or 30 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and seawater solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with either 20 mL or 30 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and seawater solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
   ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with either 20 mL or 30 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and seawater solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with either 20 mL or 30 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and seawater solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
 ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with 20 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and either seawater or distilled water solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with 20 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and either seawater or distilled water solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
   ) and to death (
) and to death (   ) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with 20 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and either seawater or distilled water solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
) ± standard error for Acanthaster cf. solaris injected in one site with 20 mL of 120 g·L−1 citric acid and either seawater or distilled water solution. Numbers above bars represent total percent mortality for each treatment. Six replicates per treatment were used.
| Source | DF | SS | MS | F | P | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experiment 1: two-way ANCOVA | |||||
| Log(Time to Immobility) | |||||
| Size | 1 | 0.20 | 0.20 | 0.18 | 0.677 | 
| Concentration | 2 | 8.94 | 4.47 | 3.91 | 0.031 * | 
| Injection sites | 1 | 1.74 | 1.74 | 1.53 | 0.226 | 
| Error | 30 | 34.23 | 1.14 | ||
| Log(Time to Death) | |||||
| Size | 1 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.02 | 0.882 | 
| Concentration | 2 | 1.35 | 0.68 | 2.49 | 0.100 | 
| Injection sites | 1 | 2.82 | 2.82 | 10.37 | 0.003 * | 
| Error | 30 | 8.16 | 0.27 | ||
| Experiment 2: one-way ANCOVA | |||||
| Time to Immobility | |||||
| Size | 1 | 196.60 | 196.60 | 0.34 | 0.579 | 
| Volume | 1 | 23.44 | 23.44 | 0.04 | 0.847 | 
| Error | 7 | 4070.46 | 581.49 | ||
| Time to Death | |||||
| Size | 1 | 709.08 | 709.08 | 1.43 | 0.270 | 
| Volume | 1 | 96.74 | 96.74 | 0.20 | 0.671 | 
| Error | 7 | 3454.80 | 493.54 | ||
| Experiment 3: one-way ANCOVA | |||||
| Time to Immobility | |||||
| Size | 1 | 61.44 | 61.44 | 0.05 | 0.836 | 
| Water type | 1 | 800.55 | 800.55 | 0.61 | 0.465 | 
| Error | 6 | 7878.63 | 1313.11 | ||
| Time to Death | |||||
| Size | 1 | 367.11 | 367.11 | 0.30 | 0.603 | 
| Water type | 1 | 1241.10 | 1241.10 | 1.01 | 0.352 | 
| Error | 6 | 7333.14 | 1222.19 | 
| Absolute Lethal Dose (LD100) | Time to Death | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium bisulphate | Multiple injections of up to 180 mL [33] of 140 g·L−1 solution [8,9] | Unreported | -Highly effective | -Multiple injections required -Potent oxygen scavenger [8,9] | 
| Bile salts | 1 × 10 mL injection of 8 g·L−1 solution [10] | ~ 28 h [10] | -Single injection -No known environmental side effects | -Not readily available in remote areas -Quarantine restrictions on access -<0.05 to 0.29 USD per injection [10,15,18,33] | 
| Cooking salt | 2 × 10 mL injections of 400 g·L−1 solution [13,16] | ~ 48 h [16] | -Readily available -No known environmental side effects -<0.05 USD per COTS [13] | -High quantities required (8 kg/1000 COTS) -Solution preparation requires heating -Precipitation and crystallization [16] | 
| Vinegar | 2 × 10 mL injections [12,18] or 1 × 25 mL injection [15] | ~30 h [15], ~40 h [12] | -Single injection -Readily available -No known environmental side effects -<0.05 USD per COTS [15] | -High quantities required (20–25 L/1000 COTS) | 
| Lime juice | 2 × 10 mL injections [15,18] | ~ 20 h [15] | -No known environmental side effects [15] | -High quantities required (20 L/1000 COTS) -Laborious process for juice extraction -Seasonal and not ubiquitously cheap -Perishable | 
| Powdered Citric acid a | 2 × 10 mL or 4 × 5 mL injections of 90–150 g·L−1 solution | ~ 26 h b | -Readily available, long shelf life -No known environmental side effects -<0.05 USD per COTS a -Easily transportable (180–300 g/1000 COTS) | Multiple injections required | 
© 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Buck, A.C.E.; Gardiner, N.M.; Boström-Einarsson, L. Citric Acid Injections: An Accessible and Efficient Method for Controlling Outbreaks of the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Acanthaster cf. solaris. Diversity 2016, 8, 28. https://doi.org/10.3390/d8040028
Buck ACE, Gardiner NM, Boström-Einarsson L. Citric Acid Injections: An Accessible and Efficient Method for Controlling Outbreaks of the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Acanthaster cf. solaris. Diversity. 2016; 8(4):28. https://doi.org/10.3390/d8040028
Chicago/Turabian StyleBuck, Alexander C. E., Naomi M. Gardiner, and Lisa Boström-Einarsson. 2016. "Citric Acid Injections: An Accessible and Efficient Method for Controlling Outbreaks of the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Acanthaster cf. solaris" Diversity 8, no. 4: 28. https://doi.org/10.3390/d8040028
APA StyleBuck, A. C. E., Gardiner, N. M., & Boström-Einarsson, L. (2016). Citric Acid Injections: An Accessible and Efficient Method for Controlling Outbreaks of the Crown-of-Thorns Starfish Acanthaster cf. solaris. Diversity, 8(4), 28. https://doi.org/10.3390/d8040028
 
         
                                                

 
       