Blog post by PhD Student Jackson Chu. Originally posted on Wiring the Abyss 2014 Expedition portal
An important part of climate change research is measuring and predicting the magnitude of ecosystem response. The northeast Pacific is a global hotspot for future oxygen loss driven by climate change. Overall oxygen content in the oceans will drop if sea surface temperatures continue to rise because warmer sea water holds less oxygen. If oxygen levels drop too low (hypoxia), animals will have to migrate, adapt or die – but how do you measure these thresholds for animal life?
Part of our ongoing ecological research on the impacts of oxygen loss on marine biodiversity is to determine low oxygen thresholds for animals living in hypoxic environments on Canada’s Pacific Coast. From years of surveying the life living around the Ocean Networks Canada instrumentation in Saanich Inlet, we have identified the slender sole (Lyopsetta exilis) as one of the key indicator species that drives assembly patterns for communities living in hypoxia. In order to measure hypoxia thresholds, we need to capture the fish with a trawl, keep them alive, and then measure physiological parameters such as metabolic rates and critical oxygen tensions under lab-controlled conditions.
A Benthic Transect Across Hypoxia from Jackson Chu on Vimeo.
We hope to capture more of these fish in the near future, as we’ve already piqued the interest of several research groups who are curious to figure out more about their weird physiology.

A slender sole (Lyopsetta exilis) captured from this week's trawl.
Photo courtesy of Jackson Chu (University of Victoria)

PhD Student Jackson Chu (University of Victoria)
aboard CCGS John P. Tully setting the fish trawl.
The small batch of fish from this week’s trawl is currently alive and happily living in the Aquatics Unit at the University of Victoria. This small cohort (n=39!) will be just enough to get our lab experiments started. When we match these lab-data to our field surveys, these measurements will tell us ‘how close to the edge’ animals can live under severe hypoxia.

Jackson Chu, Jonathan Rose (University of Victoria, Biology Department)
and Fabio De Leo (ONC) hand sorting slender sole into coolers for transport to UVic.
by Jackson W.F. Chu, PhD Candidate
Biology, University of Victoria