The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae

The coral reef ecosystem supports the greatest taxonomic diversity in the ocean and is shaped by a suite of biotic and abiotic factors. One ecological interaction that is important in structuring coral reefs is herbivory. A series of field surveys found that sea urchin grazing on crustose coralline...

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Main Author: Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
Other Authors: Carpenter, Robert C., Steele, Mark A., Edmunds, Peter J.
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: California State University, Northridge 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138589
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spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:scholarworks:7m01bp94r 2024-11-03T14:58:40+00:00 The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae Johnson, Maggie Dorothy Carpenter, Robert C. Steele, Mark A. Edmunds, Peter J. 2011-05 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138589 English eng California State University, Northridge Biology http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138589 Coralline algae Coral reef biology Algae Dissertations Academic -- CSUN -- Biology Acidification Masters Thesis 2011 ftcalifstateuniv 2024-10-15T01:33:08Z The coral reef ecosystem supports the greatest taxonomic diversity in the ocean and is shaped by a suite of biotic and abiotic factors. One ecological interaction that is important in structuring coral reefs is herbivory. A series of field surveys found that sea urchin grazing on crustose coralline algae was a frequent occurrence on the fringing reefs of Nanwan Bay, southern Taiwan, where more than 50% of grazing scars had been inflicted by sea urchins. Grazing assays conducted in southern Taiwan in August 2009 showed that the closely related sea urchin species Echinothrix diadema and Diadema savignyi had similar grazing effects on the tropical coralline alga Hydrolithon onkodes, where each species grazed similar amounts of coralline algal surface area. Hydrolithon onkodes is an abundant species of tropical coralline algae throughout the Indo-Pacific, and on the northshore of Moorea, French Polynesia H. onkodes accounted for up to 11% of the benthic cover on the shallow backreef. A series of grazing assays conducted in Moorea in January 2010 showed that the sea urchin D. savignyi had a greater effect on the cryptic species of coralline alga Goniolithon improcerum by grazing more surface area than the heavily calcified species H. onkodes. These results suggest that sea urchins are important grazers of tropical coralline algae, and that the extent of thallus calcification may impact susceptibility to grazing. Two environmental factors that are becoming an increasingly important influence on coral reefs are due to the increasing concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The effects of elevated carbon dioxide (pCO2) on rates of calcification in coral reef habitats have been explored primarily for scleractinian corals with few studies addressing the impacts on crustose coralline algae. Laboratory experiments conducted in May-June 2010 found that elevated pCO2 significantly decreased calcification rates of the coralline alga H. onkodes by up to 51% and decreased rates of photosynthetic performance by 33%. ... Master Thesis Ocean acidification Scholarworks from California State University Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Scholarworks from California State University
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
topic Coralline algae
Coral reef biology
Algae
Dissertations
Academic -- CSUN -- Biology
Acidification
spellingShingle Coralline algae
Coral reef biology
Algae
Dissertations
Academic -- CSUN -- Biology
Acidification
Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
topic_facet Coralline algae
Coral reef biology
Algae
Dissertations
Academic -- CSUN -- Biology
Acidification
description The coral reef ecosystem supports the greatest taxonomic diversity in the ocean and is shaped by a suite of biotic and abiotic factors. One ecological interaction that is important in structuring coral reefs is herbivory. A series of field surveys found that sea urchin grazing on crustose coralline algae was a frequent occurrence on the fringing reefs of Nanwan Bay, southern Taiwan, where more than 50% of grazing scars had been inflicted by sea urchins. Grazing assays conducted in southern Taiwan in August 2009 showed that the closely related sea urchin species Echinothrix diadema and Diadema savignyi had similar grazing effects on the tropical coralline alga Hydrolithon onkodes, where each species grazed similar amounts of coralline algal surface area. Hydrolithon onkodes is an abundant species of tropical coralline algae throughout the Indo-Pacific, and on the northshore of Moorea, French Polynesia H. onkodes accounted for up to 11% of the benthic cover on the shallow backreef. A series of grazing assays conducted in Moorea in January 2010 showed that the sea urchin D. savignyi had a greater effect on the cryptic species of coralline alga Goniolithon improcerum by grazing more surface area than the heavily calcified species H. onkodes. These results suggest that sea urchins are important grazers of tropical coralline algae, and that the extent of thallus calcification may impact susceptibility to grazing. Two environmental factors that are becoming an increasingly important influence on coral reefs are due to the increasing concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The effects of elevated carbon dioxide (pCO2) on rates of calcification in coral reef habitats have been explored primarily for scleractinian corals with few studies addressing the impacts on crustose coralline algae. Laboratory experiments conducted in May-June 2010 found that elevated pCO2 significantly decreased calcification rates of the coralline alga H. onkodes by up to 51% and decreased rates of photosynthetic performance by 33%. ...
author2 Carpenter, Robert C.
Steele, Mark A.
Edmunds, Peter J.
format Master Thesis
author Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
author_facet Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
author_sort Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
title The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
title_short The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
title_full The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
title_fullStr The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
title_full_unstemmed The effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
title_sort effects of ocean acidification, elevated temperature and herbivory on tropical crustose coralline algae
publisher California State University, Northridge
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138589
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138589
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