A nonlinear calcification response to CO2-induced ocean acidification by the coral Oculina arbuscula

Abstract Anthropogenic elevation of atmospheric pCO 2 is predicted to cause the pH of surface seawater to decline by 0.3-0.4 units by 2100 AD, causing a 50% reduction in seawater [CO 3 2-] and undersaturation with respect to aragonite in high-latitude surface waters. We investigated the impact of CO...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J B Ries, • A L Cohen, • D C Mccorkle
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1049.577
http://nuweb2.neu.edu/rieslab/Ries_et_al_10_Coral_Reefs_Nonlinear_Calcification_Response_Coral.pdf
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Summary:Abstract Anthropogenic elevation of atmospheric pCO 2 is predicted to cause the pH of surface seawater to decline by 0.3-0.4 units by 2100 AD, causing a 50% reduction in seawater [CO 3 2-] and undersaturation with respect to aragonite in high-latitude surface waters. We investigated the impact of CO 2 -induced ocean acidification on the temperate scleractinian coral Oculina arbuscula by rearing colonies for 60 days in experimental seawaters bubbled with air-CO 2 gas mixtures of 409, 606, 903, and 2,856 ppm pCO 2 , yielding average aragonite saturation states (X A ) of 2.6, 2.3, 1.6, and 0.8. Measurement of calcification (via buoyant weighing) and linear extension (relative to a 137 Ba/ 138 Ba spike) revealed that skeletal accretion was only minimally impaired by reductions in X A from 2.6 to 1.6, although major reductions were observed at 0.8 (undersaturation). Notably, the corals continued accreting new skeletal material even in undersaturated conditions, although at reduced rates. Correlation between rates of linear extension and calcification suggests that reduced calcification under X A = 0.8 resulted from reduced aragonite accretion, rather than from localized dissolution. Accretion of pure aragonite under each X A discounts the possibility that these corals will begin producing calcite, a less soluble form of CaCO 3 , as the oceans acidify. The corals' nonlinear response to reduced X A and their ability to accrete new skeletal material in undersaturated conditions suggest that they strongly control the biomineralization process. However, our data suggest that a threshold seawater [CO 3 2-] exists, below which calcification within this species (and possibly others) becomes impaired. Indeed, the strong negative response of O. arbuscula to X A = 0.8 indicates that their response to future pCO 2 -induced ocean acidification could be both abrupt and severe once the critical X A is reached.