Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions

The human-induced rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide since the industrial revolution has led to increasing oceanic carbon uptake and changes in seawater carbonate chemistry, resulting in lowering of surface water pH. In this study we investigated the effect of increasing CO2 partial pressure (pCO2)...

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Published in:Environmental Chemistry
Main Authors: Webb, A, Malin, G, Hopkins, FE, Ho, KL, Riebesell, U, Schulz, K, Larsen, A, Liss, PS
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/6689/
https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268
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spelling ftplymouthml:oai:plymsea.ac.uk:6689 2023-05-15T17:51:41+02:00 Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions Webb, A Malin, G Hopkins, FE Ho, KL Riebesell, U Schulz, K Larsen, A Liss, PS 2016-03-21 http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/6689/ https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268 unknown Webb, A; Malin, G; Hopkins, FE; Ho, KL; Riebesell, U; Schulz, K; Larsen, A; Liss, PS. 2016 Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions. Environmental Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268 <https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268> Ecology and Environment Marine Sciences Publication - Article PeerReviewed 2016 ftplymouthml https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268 2022-09-13T05:48:42Z The human-induced rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide since the industrial revolution has led to increasing oceanic carbon uptake and changes in seawater carbonate chemistry, resulting in lowering of surface water pH. In this study we investigated the effect of increasing CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) on concentrations of volatile biogenic dimethylsulfide (DMS) and its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), through monoculture studies and community pCO2 perturbation. DMS is a climatically important gas produced by many marine algae: it transfers sulfur into the atmosphere and is a major influence on biogeochemical climate regulation through breakdown to sulfate and formation of subsequent cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Overall, production of DMS and DMSP by the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi strain RCC1229 was unaffected by growth at 900 matm pCO2, but DMSP production normalised to cell volume was 12% lower at the higher pCO2 treatment. These cultures were compared with community DMS and DMSP production during an elevated pCO2 mesocosm experiment with the aim of studying E. huxleyi in the natural environment. Results contrasted with the culture experiments and showed reductions in community DMS and DMSP concentrations of up to 60 and 32% respectively at pCO2 up to 3000 matm, with changes attributed to poorer growth of DMSP-producing nanophytoplankton species, including E. huxleyi, and potentially increased microbial consumption of DMSand dissolvedDMSPat higher pCO2.DMSandDMSPproduction differences between culture and community likely arise from pH affecting the inter-species responses between microbial producers and consumers. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML) Environmental Chemistry 13 2 314
institution Open Polar
collection Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML)
op_collection_id ftplymouthml
language unknown
topic Ecology and Environment
Marine Sciences
spellingShingle Ecology and Environment
Marine Sciences
Webb, A
Malin, G
Hopkins, FE
Ho, KL
Riebesell, U
Schulz, K
Larsen, A
Liss, PS
Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
topic_facet Ecology and Environment
Marine Sciences
description The human-induced rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide since the industrial revolution has led to increasing oceanic carbon uptake and changes in seawater carbonate chemistry, resulting in lowering of surface water pH. In this study we investigated the effect of increasing CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) on concentrations of volatile biogenic dimethylsulfide (DMS) and its precursor dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP), through monoculture studies and community pCO2 perturbation. DMS is a climatically important gas produced by many marine algae: it transfers sulfur into the atmosphere and is a major influence on biogeochemical climate regulation through breakdown to sulfate and formation of subsequent cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Overall, production of DMS and DMSP by the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi strain RCC1229 was unaffected by growth at 900 matm pCO2, but DMSP production normalised to cell volume was 12% lower at the higher pCO2 treatment. These cultures were compared with community DMS and DMSP production during an elevated pCO2 mesocosm experiment with the aim of studying E. huxleyi in the natural environment. Results contrasted with the culture experiments and showed reductions in community DMS and DMSP concentrations of up to 60 and 32% respectively at pCO2 up to 3000 matm, with changes attributed to poorer growth of DMSP-producing nanophytoplankton species, including E. huxleyi, and potentially increased microbial consumption of DMSand dissolvedDMSPat higher pCO2.DMSandDMSPproduction differences between culture and community likely arise from pH affecting the inter-species responses between microbial producers and consumers.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Webb, A
Malin, G
Hopkins, FE
Ho, KL
Riebesell, U
Schulz, K
Larsen, A
Liss, PS
author_facet Webb, A
Malin, G
Hopkins, FE
Ho, KL
Riebesell, U
Schulz, K
Larsen, A
Liss, PS
author_sort Webb, A
title Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
title_short Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
title_full Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
title_fullStr Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
title_full_unstemmed Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
title_sort ocean acidification has different effects on the production of dms and dmsp measured in cultures of emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions
publishDate 2016
url http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/6689/
https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Webb, A; Malin, G; Hopkins, FE; Ho, KL; Riebesell, U; Schulz, K; Larsen, A; Liss, PS. 2016 Ocean acidification has different effects on the production of DMS and DMSP measured in cultures of Emiliania huxleyi and a mesocosm study: a comparison of laboratory monocultures and community interactions. Environmental Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268 <https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268>
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1071/EN14268
container_title Environmental Chemistry
container_volume 13
container_issue 2
container_start_page 314
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