Seawater carbonate chemistry and calcification during an experiment with a coral Porites lutea, 2004

Using living corals collected from Okinawan coral reefs, laboratory experiments were performed to investigate the relationship between coral calcification and aragonite saturation state (W) of seawater at 25 infinity C. Calcification rate of a massive coral Porites lutea cultured in a beaker showed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ohde, Shigeru, Hossain, Mirza M Mozaffar
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2004
Subjects:
EXP
pH
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.721879
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.721879
Description
Summary:Using living corals collected from Okinawan coral reefs, laboratory experiments were performed to investigate the relationship between coral calcification and aragonite saturation state (W) of seawater at 25 infinity C. Calcification rate of a massive coral Porites lutea cultured in a beaker showed a linear increase with increasing Waragonite values (1.08-7.77) of seawater. The increasing trend of calcification rate (c) for W is expressed as an equation, c = aW + b (a, b: constants). When W was larger than ~4, the coral samples calcified during nighttime, indicating an evidence of dark calcification. This study strongly suggests that calcification of Porites lutea depends on W of ambient seawater. A decrease in saturation state of seawater due to increased pCO2 may decrease reef-building capacity of corals through reducing calcification rate of corals.