Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin

Not Available Ocean acidification is one of the major impacts of climate change in sea which is manifested by the decrease in hydrogen ion concentration (pH) of seawater mainly due to increased uptake of CO2 and reduction in carbonate ions. This is a report on the dissolution rate of dead shells of...

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Main Authors: Kaladharan,P, Amalu,A M, Revathy,S
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MBAI, Cochin-14 2019
Subjects:
CO2
pH
Online Access:http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/64329
id ftindiancar:oai:krishi.icar.gov.in:123456789/64329
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spelling ftindiancar:oai:krishi.icar.gov.in:123456789/64329 2023-05-15T17:51:34+02:00 Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin Not Available Kaladharan,P Amalu,A M Revathy,S 2019 http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/64329 English eng MBAI, Cochin-14 Not Available http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/64329 Seawater acidification carbon sequestration seaweeds marine bivalves CO2 pH shell dissolution Article 2019 ftindiancar 2021-11-13T18:10:06Z Not Available Ocean acidification is one of the major impacts of climate change in sea which is manifested by the decrease in hydrogen ion concentration (pH) of seawater mainly due to increased uptake of CO2 and reduction in carbonate ions. This is a report on the dissolution rate of dead shells of four marine bivalves and spines of a sea urchin when treated with different levels of CO2 dissolved in seawater for 48 hours which was measured gravimetrically. Dissolution of dead shells expressed as reduction in shell weight was directly proportional to the concentration of dissolved CO2. Live thallus of green seaweed Chaetomorpha antennina did reduce the magnitude of dissolution rates (P<0.05) of all the shells and spines considerably as well as the change in pH of ambient seawater due to the addition of CO2. The remedial property of seaweeds was more effective at lower concentrations of dissolved CO2. The induced change in pH was restored by green seaweed only at concentrations above 250 ppm. Although we noticed strong impact of dissolved CO2 on the dead shells of Mactrinula plicataria even at 100 ppm level, the remedial action by the green seaweed was maximum in Siliqua radiata followed by Perna viridis. Results of this laboratory study shows the positive role of seaweeds in neutralizing the acidification impacts. Not Available Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification KRISHI Publication and Data Inventory Repository (Knowledge based Resources Information Systems Hub for Innovations in Agriculture - Indian Council of Agricultural Research, ICAR)
institution Open Polar
collection KRISHI Publication and Data Inventory Repository (Knowledge based Resources Information Systems Hub for Innovations in Agriculture - Indian Council of Agricultural Research, ICAR)
op_collection_id ftindiancar
language English
topic Seawater acidification
carbon sequestration
seaweeds
marine bivalves
CO2
pH
shell dissolution
spellingShingle Seawater acidification
carbon sequestration
seaweeds
marine bivalves
CO2
pH
shell dissolution
Kaladharan,P
Amalu,A M
Revathy,S
Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
topic_facet Seawater acidification
carbon sequestration
seaweeds
marine bivalves
CO2
pH
shell dissolution
description Not Available Ocean acidification is one of the major impacts of climate change in sea which is manifested by the decrease in hydrogen ion concentration (pH) of seawater mainly due to increased uptake of CO2 and reduction in carbonate ions. This is a report on the dissolution rate of dead shells of four marine bivalves and spines of a sea urchin when treated with different levels of CO2 dissolved in seawater for 48 hours which was measured gravimetrically. Dissolution of dead shells expressed as reduction in shell weight was directly proportional to the concentration of dissolved CO2. Live thallus of green seaweed Chaetomorpha antennina did reduce the magnitude of dissolution rates (P<0.05) of all the shells and spines considerably as well as the change in pH of ambient seawater due to the addition of CO2. The remedial property of seaweeds was more effective at lower concentrations of dissolved CO2. The induced change in pH was restored by green seaweed only at concentrations above 250 ppm. Although we noticed strong impact of dissolved CO2 on the dead shells of Mactrinula plicataria even at 100 ppm level, the remedial action by the green seaweed was maximum in Siliqua radiata followed by Perna viridis. Results of this laboratory study shows the positive role of seaweeds in neutralizing the acidification impacts. Not Available
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kaladharan,P
Amalu,A M
Revathy,S
author_facet Kaladharan,P
Amalu,A M
Revathy,S
author_sort Kaladharan,P
title Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
title_short Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
title_full Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
title_fullStr Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
title_full_unstemmed Role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- A laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
title_sort role of seaweeds in neutralizing the impact of seawater acidification- a laboratory study with beached shells of certain bivalves and spines of a sea urchin
publisher MBAI, Cochin-14
publishDate 2019
url http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/64329
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Not Available
http://krishi.icar.gov.in/jspui/handle/123456789/64329
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