Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)

This dataset measures 5 effects of temperature and pH stressors (individual and combined) on tropical Foraminifera. The effects measured are: respiration, survivorship, growth, chl-a content and photochemistry. The study was conducted in 2011 and the data is provided as 5 single sheet spreadsheets.\...

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Other Authors: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM) (isOwnedBy)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: data.gov.au
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/combined-effects-near-aims-marum/1942125
http://data.gov.au/dataset/173ef647-da81-4d46-bf7c-5417113d68e8
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1942125
record_format openpolar
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1942125 2023-09-05T13:22:13+02:00 Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM) Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM) (isOwnedBy) Spatial: 147.05599,-19.27229 Spatial: true https://researchdata.edu.au/combined-effects-near-aims-marum/1942125 http://data.gov.au/dataset/173ef647-da81-4d46-bf7c-5417113d68e8 unknown data.gov.au https://researchdata.edu.au/combined-effects-near-aims-marum/1942125 http://data.gov.au/dataset/173ef647-da81-4d46-bf7c-5417113d68e8 combined-effects-of-near-future-temperature-increase-and-ocean-acidification-on-coral-reef-fora Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM) Benthic Foraminifera ocean acidification dataset ftands 2023-08-14T23:07:43Z This dataset measures 5 effects of temperature and pH stressors (individual and combined) on tropical Foraminifera. The effects measured are: respiration, survivorship, growth, chl-a content and photochemistry. The study was conducted in 2011 and the data is provided as 5 single sheet spreadsheets.\n\nWarming and changes in ocean carbonate chemistry alter marine coastal ecosystems at an accelerating pace. Here we investigate the individual effects as well as the interaction of two stressors, temperature and pH on two species of benthic coral reef Foraminifera. This study consisted of a 7 week aquarium experiment manipulating temperature and pH changes and measuring survivorship, growth, photosynthesis, respiration and chl-a content in these benthic coral reef Foraminifera.\n\n\nMethod:\n\nSpecimens were collected from Orpheus Island in the central Great Barrier Reef in September 2011. H. depressa was collected at a depth of 8¿12 m from coral rubble at Cattle Bay (18°34¿08¿¿ S 146°28¿55¿¿ E) and M. vertebralis at a depth of 0¿1 m (below Lowest Astronomical Tide) from turf algae-covered rocks at Hazard Bay (18°38¿58¿¿ S 146°29¿11¿¿ E). Both species were acclimated to laboratory conditions in tanks with moderate flow-through conditions (same as used in experimental setup) under low-light conditions (10 µmol photons m-2 s-1) for a period of 3 weeks.\n12 flow-through aquaria (working volume 17.5 L) were installed in a constant temperature room, and the experiment was carried out over a period of 53 d.\n\nSpecimens were kept inside custom made flow-through housings in each aquarium to achieve higher flow conditions more closely mimicking their habitat than in previous experiments. Flow-through housings contained two levels made from two standard 6-well cell culturing plates with flow-through lids. Twenty-four specimens (four specimens per well) of H. depressa were put in the lower level and the same number of M. vertebralis in the top level.\n\nFor each temperature (28 and 31 ºC) and pCO2 level (~790 µatm, pHNIST 7.9 ... Dataset Ocean acidification Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic Benthic Foraminifera
ocean acidification
spellingShingle Benthic Foraminifera
ocean acidification
Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
topic_facet Benthic Foraminifera
ocean acidification
description This dataset measures 5 effects of temperature and pH stressors (individual and combined) on tropical Foraminifera. The effects measured are: respiration, survivorship, growth, chl-a content and photochemistry. The study was conducted in 2011 and the data is provided as 5 single sheet spreadsheets.\n\nWarming and changes in ocean carbonate chemistry alter marine coastal ecosystems at an accelerating pace. Here we investigate the individual effects as well as the interaction of two stressors, temperature and pH on two species of benthic coral reef Foraminifera. This study consisted of a 7 week aquarium experiment manipulating temperature and pH changes and measuring survivorship, growth, photosynthesis, respiration and chl-a content in these benthic coral reef Foraminifera.\n\n\nMethod:\n\nSpecimens were collected from Orpheus Island in the central Great Barrier Reef in September 2011. H. depressa was collected at a depth of 8¿12 m from coral rubble at Cattle Bay (18°34¿08¿¿ S 146°28¿55¿¿ E) and M. vertebralis at a depth of 0¿1 m (below Lowest Astronomical Tide) from turf algae-covered rocks at Hazard Bay (18°38¿58¿¿ S 146°29¿11¿¿ E). Both species were acclimated to laboratory conditions in tanks with moderate flow-through conditions (same as used in experimental setup) under low-light conditions (10 µmol photons m-2 s-1) for a period of 3 weeks.\n12 flow-through aquaria (working volume 17.5 L) were installed in a constant temperature room, and the experiment was carried out over a period of 53 d.\n\nSpecimens were kept inside custom made flow-through housings in each aquarium to achieve higher flow conditions more closely mimicking their habitat than in previous experiments. Flow-through housings contained two levels made from two standard 6-well cell culturing plates with flow-through lids. Twenty-four specimens (four specimens per well) of H. depressa were put in the lower level and the same number of M. vertebralis in the top level.\n\nFor each temperature (28 and 31 ºC) and pCO2 level (~790 µatm, pHNIST 7.9 ...
author2 Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM) (isOwnedBy)
format Dataset
title Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
title_short Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
title_full Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
title_fullStr Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
title_full_unstemmed Combined Effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera Marginopora vertebralis and Heterostegina depressa. (NERP TE 5.2, AIMS and MARUM)
title_sort combined effects of near-future temperature increase and ocean acidification on coral reef foraminifera marginopora vertebralis and heterostegina depressa. (nerp te 5.2, aims and marum)
publisher data.gov.au
url https://researchdata.edu.au/combined-effects-near-aims-marum/1942125
http://data.gov.au/dataset/173ef647-da81-4d46-bf7c-5417113d68e8
op_coverage Spatial: 147.05599,-19.27229
Spatial: true
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM)
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/combined-effects-near-aims-marum/1942125
http://data.gov.au/dataset/173ef647-da81-4d46-bf7c-5417113d68e8
combined-effects-of-near-future-temperature-increase-and-ocean-acidification-on-coral-reef-fora
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