Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change

Natural heterogeneity and global change are key environmental drivers of ecosystem structure and function in both terrestrial and marine ecosystems. At the foundation of all food webs are the primary producers, which require macronutrients and photosynthetic substrate in order to fix inorganic carbo...

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Main Author: Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994
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spelling ftcdlib:qt1bz3c994 2023-05-15T17:50:11+02:00 Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change Johnson, Maggie Dorothy 176 2016-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994 http://n2t.net/ark:/13030/m58w822k en eng eScholarship, University of California http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994 qt1bz3c994 http://n2t.net/ark:/13030/m58w822k public Johnson, Maggie Dorothy. (2016). Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change. UC San Diego: Marine biology. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994 Ecology Biology algae coral reef global warming nutrient ocean acidification primary producer dissertation 2016 ftcdlib 2016-09-16T22:55:03Z Natural heterogeneity and global change are key environmental drivers of ecosystem structure and function in both terrestrial and marine ecosystems. At the foundation of all food webs are the primary producers, which require macronutrients and photosynthetic substrate in order to fix inorganic carbon into organic sugars and fuel energy transfer into food webs. This dissertation is an examination of the ecophysiology, or the interaction of organismal physiology with the environment, of key benthic primary producers on coral reefs. Reef-building corals and algae are the most abundant primary producers on coral reefs, and I use coarse functional groupings categorized as reef-building corals, fleshy macroalgae, calcareous macroalgae, crustose coralline algae (CCA) and turf algae assemblages. I assessed the influence of, 1) a natural gradient in inorganic nutrient availability, and, 2) simulated global change on the ecophysiology of corals and algae by functional group. The Southern Line Islands are an archipelago of islands that span the equatorial upwelling region and demonstrate predictable heterogeneity in inorganic nutrient availability. The dominant species of corals and algae demonstrated higher pigment concentrations and photosynthetic efficiency across the archipelago as a function of increasing inorganic nutrient concentrations. This suggests that natural fluxes of inorganic nutrients have an important positive influence on primary producers. I then conducted laboratory experiments on Palmyra Atoll and in Moorea, French Polynesia to test the effects of ocean acidification (OA) and warming on different functional groups of algae. Across a suite of species, OA increased the growth of fleshy macroalgae and turf algae assemblages, but decreased growth and calcification of calcareous macroalgae and CCA. Ocean acidification had a stronger effect than warming on the biomass of turf algae assemblages. Positive effects of OA on turf algae metabolism were increased by warming. These findings suggest that fleshy and calcifying algae respond differently to global change stressors. Ocean acidification has the potential to increase growth and productivity of fleshy algae, while concurrently decreasing growth and calcification of calcifying algae. Anthropogenic activities are increasingly altering the natural environment, and the results of this dissertation improve our ability to predict the response of corals and algae to increasing exposure to nutrients, OA and warming in the near-future ocean. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship Line Islands ENVELOPE(-67.233,-67.233,-67.933,-67.933)
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Ecology
Biology
algae
coral reef
global warming
nutrient
ocean acidification
primary producer
spellingShingle Ecology
Biology
algae
coral reef
global warming
nutrient
ocean acidification
primary producer
Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
topic_facet Ecology
Biology
algae
coral reef
global warming
nutrient
ocean acidification
primary producer
description Natural heterogeneity and global change are key environmental drivers of ecosystem structure and function in both terrestrial and marine ecosystems. At the foundation of all food webs are the primary producers, which require macronutrients and photosynthetic substrate in order to fix inorganic carbon into organic sugars and fuel energy transfer into food webs. This dissertation is an examination of the ecophysiology, or the interaction of organismal physiology with the environment, of key benthic primary producers on coral reefs. Reef-building corals and algae are the most abundant primary producers on coral reefs, and I use coarse functional groupings categorized as reef-building corals, fleshy macroalgae, calcareous macroalgae, crustose coralline algae (CCA) and turf algae assemblages. I assessed the influence of, 1) a natural gradient in inorganic nutrient availability, and, 2) simulated global change on the ecophysiology of corals and algae by functional group. The Southern Line Islands are an archipelago of islands that span the equatorial upwelling region and demonstrate predictable heterogeneity in inorganic nutrient availability. The dominant species of corals and algae demonstrated higher pigment concentrations and photosynthetic efficiency across the archipelago as a function of increasing inorganic nutrient concentrations. This suggests that natural fluxes of inorganic nutrients have an important positive influence on primary producers. I then conducted laboratory experiments on Palmyra Atoll and in Moorea, French Polynesia to test the effects of ocean acidification (OA) and warming on different functional groups of algae. Across a suite of species, OA increased the growth of fleshy macroalgae and turf algae assemblages, but decreased growth and calcification of calcareous macroalgae and CCA. Ocean acidification had a stronger effect than warming on the biomass of turf algae assemblages. Positive effects of OA on turf algae metabolism were increased by warming. These findings suggest that fleshy and calcifying algae respond differently to global change stressors. Ocean acidification has the potential to increase growth and productivity of fleshy algae, while concurrently decreasing growth and calcification of calcifying algae. Anthropogenic activities are increasingly altering the natural environment, and the results of this dissertation improve our ability to predict the response of corals and algae to increasing exposure to nutrients, OA and warming in the near-future ocean.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
author_facet Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
author_sort Johnson, Maggie Dorothy
title Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
title_short Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
title_full Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
title_fullStr Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
title_full_unstemmed Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
title_sort ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2016
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994
http://n2t.net/ark:/13030/m58w822k
op_coverage 176
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.233,-67.233,-67.933,-67.933)
geographic Line Islands
geographic_facet Line Islands
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Johnson, Maggie Dorothy. (2016). Ecophysiology of coral reef primary producers: Response to natural and anthropogenic environmental change. UC San Diego: Marine biology. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994
op_relation http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1bz3c994
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