Nighttime dissolution in a temperate coastal ocean ecosystem increases under acidification.

Anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) are causing ocean acidification, lowering seawater aragonite (CaCO3) saturation state (Ω arag), with potentially substantial impacts on marine ecosystems over the 21(st) Century. Calcifying organisms have exhibited reduced calcification under lower sat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kwiatkowski, Lester, Gaylord, Brian, Hill, Tessa, Hosfelt, Jessica, Kroeker, Kristy J, Nebuchina, Yana, Ninokawa, Aaron, Russell, Ann D, Rivest, Emily B, Sesboüé, Marine, Caldeira, Ken
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2016
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Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1p48v7q4
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Summary:Anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) are causing ocean acidification, lowering seawater aragonite (CaCO3) saturation state (Ω arag), with potentially substantial impacts on marine ecosystems over the 21(st) Century. Calcifying organisms have exhibited reduced calcification under lower saturation state conditions in aquaria. However, the in situ sensitivity of calcifying ecosystems to future ocean acidification remains unknown. Here we assess the community level sensitivity of calcification to local CO2-induced acidification caused by natural respiration in an unperturbed, biodiverse, temperate intertidal ecosystem. We find that on hourly timescales nighttime community calcification is strongly influenced by Ω arag, with greater net calcium carbonate dissolution under more acidic conditions. Daytime calcification however, is not detectably affected by Ω arag. If the short-term sensitivity of community calcification to Ω arag is representative of the long-term sensitivity to ocean acidification, nighttime dissolution in these intertidal ecosystems could more than double by 2050, with significant ecological and economic consequences.