DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf

Seagrass meadows are one of the most productive ecosystems on the planet, but their photosynthesis rate may be limited by carbon dioxide but mitigated by exploiting the high concentration of bicarbonate in the ocean using different active processes. Seagrasses are declining worldwide at an accelerat...

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Main Authors: Stephen Christopher Maberly, Andrew W. Stott, Brigitte Gontero
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_The_differential_ability_of_two_species_of_seagrass_to_use_carbon_dioxide_and_bicarbonate_and_their_modelled_response_to_rising_concentrations_of_inorganic_carbon_pdf/21228257
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/21228257 2023-05-15T17:52:08+02:00 DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf Stephen Christopher Maberly Andrew W. Stott Brigitte Gontero 2022-09-29T06:27:37Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_The_differential_ability_of_two_species_of_seagrass_to_use_carbon_dioxide_and_bicarbonate_and_their_modelled_response_to_rising_concentrations_of_inorganic_carbon_pdf/21228257 unknown doi:10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_The_differential_ability_of_two_species_of_seagrass_to_use_carbon_dioxide_and_bicarbonate_and_their_modelled_response_to_rising_concentrations_of_inorganic_carbon_pdf/21228257 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Botany Plant Biology Plant Systematics and Taxonomy Plant Cell and Molecular Biology Plant Developmental and Reproductive Biology Plant Pathology Plant Physiology Plant Biology not elsewhere classified climate change CO2 concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) ocean acidification Posidonia oceanica rising CO2 seagrass Zostera marina Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001 2022-10-05T23:11:54Z Seagrass meadows are one of the most productive ecosystems on the planet, but their photosynthesis rate may be limited by carbon dioxide but mitigated by exploiting the high concentration of bicarbonate in the ocean using different active processes. Seagrasses are declining worldwide at an accelerating rate because of numerous anthropogenic pressures. However, rising ocean concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon, caused by increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, may benefit seagrass photosynthesis. Here we compare the ability of two seagrass from the Mediterranean Sea, Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile and Zostera marina L., to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate at light saturation, and model how increasing concentrations of inorganic carbon affect their photosynthesis rate. pH-drift measurements confirmed that both species were able to use bicarbonate in addition to carbon dioxide, but that Z. marina was more effective than P. oceanica. Kinetic experiments showed that, compared to Z. marina, P. oceanica had a seven-fold higher affinity for carbon dioxide and a 1.6-fold higher affinity for bicarbonate. However, the maximal rate of bicarbonate uptake in Z. marina was 2.1-fold higher than in P. oceanica. In equilibrium with 410 ppm carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the modelled rates of photosynthesis by Z. marina were slightly higher than P. oceanica, less carbon limited and depended on bicarbonate to a greater extent. This greater reliance by Z. marina is consistent with its less depleted 13 C content compared to P. oceanica. Modelled photosynthesis suggests that both species would depend on bicarbonate alone at an atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressure of 280 ppm. P. oceanica was projected to benefit more than Z. marina with increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressures, and at the highest carbon dioxide scenario of 1135 ppm, would have higher rates of photosynthesis and be more saturated by inorganic carbon than Z. marina. In both species, the proportional reliance on bicarbonate declined ... Dataset Ocean acidification Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Botany
Plant Biology
Plant Systematics and Taxonomy
Plant Cell and Molecular Biology
Plant Developmental and Reproductive Biology
Plant Pathology
Plant Physiology
Plant Biology not elsewhere classified
climate change
CO2 concentrating mechanisms (CCMs)
ocean acidification
Posidonia oceanica
rising CO2
seagrass
Zostera marina
spellingShingle Botany
Plant Biology
Plant Systematics and Taxonomy
Plant Cell and Molecular Biology
Plant Developmental and Reproductive Biology
Plant Pathology
Plant Physiology
Plant Biology not elsewhere classified
climate change
CO2 concentrating mechanisms (CCMs)
ocean acidification
Posidonia oceanica
rising CO2
seagrass
Zostera marina
Stephen Christopher Maberly
Andrew W. Stott
Brigitte Gontero
DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
topic_facet Botany
Plant Biology
Plant Systematics and Taxonomy
Plant Cell and Molecular Biology
Plant Developmental and Reproductive Biology
Plant Pathology
Plant Physiology
Plant Biology not elsewhere classified
climate change
CO2 concentrating mechanisms (CCMs)
ocean acidification
Posidonia oceanica
rising CO2
seagrass
Zostera marina
description Seagrass meadows are one of the most productive ecosystems on the planet, but their photosynthesis rate may be limited by carbon dioxide but mitigated by exploiting the high concentration of bicarbonate in the ocean using different active processes. Seagrasses are declining worldwide at an accelerating rate because of numerous anthropogenic pressures. However, rising ocean concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon, caused by increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide, may benefit seagrass photosynthesis. Here we compare the ability of two seagrass from the Mediterranean Sea, Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile and Zostera marina L., to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate at light saturation, and model how increasing concentrations of inorganic carbon affect their photosynthesis rate. pH-drift measurements confirmed that both species were able to use bicarbonate in addition to carbon dioxide, but that Z. marina was more effective than P. oceanica. Kinetic experiments showed that, compared to Z. marina, P. oceanica had a seven-fold higher affinity for carbon dioxide and a 1.6-fold higher affinity for bicarbonate. However, the maximal rate of bicarbonate uptake in Z. marina was 2.1-fold higher than in P. oceanica. In equilibrium with 410 ppm carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the modelled rates of photosynthesis by Z. marina were slightly higher than P. oceanica, less carbon limited and depended on bicarbonate to a greater extent. This greater reliance by Z. marina is consistent with its less depleted 13 C content compared to P. oceanica. Modelled photosynthesis suggests that both species would depend on bicarbonate alone at an atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressure of 280 ppm. P. oceanica was projected to benefit more than Z. marina with increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide partial pressures, and at the highest carbon dioxide scenario of 1135 ppm, would have higher rates of photosynthesis and be more saturated by inorganic carbon than Z. marina. In both species, the proportional reliance on bicarbonate declined ...
format Dataset
author Stephen Christopher Maberly
Andrew W. Stott
Brigitte Gontero
author_facet Stephen Christopher Maberly
Andrew W. Stott
Brigitte Gontero
author_sort Stephen Christopher Maberly
title DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
title_short DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
title_full DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
title_fullStr DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
title_full_unstemmed DataSheet_1_The differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
title_sort datasheet_1_the differential ability of two species of seagrass to use carbon dioxide and bicarbonate and their modelled response to rising concentrations of inorganic carbon.pdf
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_The_differential_ability_of_two_species_of_seagrass_to_use_carbon_dioxide_and_bicarbonate_and_their_modelled_response_to_rising_concentrations_of_inorganic_carbon_pdf/21228257
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation doi:10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet_1_The_differential_ability_of_two_species_of_seagrass_to_use_carbon_dioxide_and_bicarbonate_and_their_modelled_response_to_rising_concentrations_of_inorganic_carbon_pdf/21228257
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.936716.s001
_version_ 1766159492972544000